‘Westworld’ Just Got Inside Its Own Head With That Shocking Reunion
(Major spoiler alert: Please do not read ahead unless you’ve seen Sunday’s episode of “Westworld,” “Phase Space.”)
Dr. Robert Ford was dead: to begin with. (We’re like 99.9 percent sure, at this point.)
But his mind? Well, that’s a horse of a different color.
Anthony Hopkins made his triumphant return to “Westworld” as everyone’s favorite late, great amusement park creator (sorry, Walt) on Sunday’s episode, “Phase Space.” And while his shocking cameo lasted but a few seconds and he only uttered three words, his unexpected appearance on Jonthan Nolan and Lisa Joy’s HBO series will be enough to launch a thousand fan theories come morning.
Also Read: 'Westworld': Shogun World Reflects Ties Between Samurai Films and Westerns
Now, if Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) shot Ford in the back of the head at the end of Season 1 and his lifeless body is currently rotting inside the park, then how did Hopkins resurrect his performance?
Toward the end of the episode, Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) has Elsie (Shannon Woodard) slice his robot host brain out of his head and upload it to “The Cradle” (Westworld’s mainframe, hive mind, the thing that controls all the things, etc.) to help them figure out what is keeping them from regaining control of the system.
Once he’s “inside” the park’s head, he starts walking through a simulated version of Sweetwater and toward the Mariposa Saloon. He passes versions of Dolores and Teddy (James Marsden) before entering the establishment to see his partner’s face reflecting back at him in the glass of the piano (See below).
Also Read: 'Westworld': Thandie Newton Tells Us Why Maeve's Superpower Went Into Overdrive in Shogun World
“Hello, old friend,” Ford says, while tickling the ivories.
And the episode ends with Bernard — and all of us at home — in shock.
We’re not sure where things go from here, but we know Ford is dead (we saw the maggots eating his face, OK?!?) so what we are seeing here is most likely an uploaded version of his consciousness. And based on all those successful(?) attempts to put James Delos inside a host earlier this season in the episode “Riddle of the Sphinx,” we know that can be done.
Also Read: 'Westworld': Rinko Kikuchi Explains How Shogun World Episode Sidesteps Cultural Appropriation
You just need one of those control units that look like a bouncy ball. Like, oh, I don’t know, the one we’ve seen Bernard upload someone’s consciousness onto in repeated flashbacks this season.
Yes, seems like it was Ford he was ploading. And it seems like he put Ford inside The Cradle.
“Westworld” airs Sundays a 9/8 c on HBO.
'Westworld': Shogun World Reflects Ties Between Samurai Films and Westerns
'Westworld': Thandie Newton Tells Us Why Maeve's Superpower Went Into Overdrive in Shogun World
'Westworld': Rinko Kikuchi Explains How Shogun World Episode Sidesteps Cultural Appropriation
'Westworld': Thandie Newton, Rinko Kikuchi on the 'Fun' of All That Shogun World Doppleganging