Spoilers below for Episode 7 of Cape Fear. New episodes stream every Friday on Apple TV.
After seven episodes, Cape Fear has finally decided what type of show it wants to be and I’m 100% on board. After weeks of mystery, suspense, and (at times) agonizingly plodding plot developments, the Apple TV series has fully embraced its identity as a bonkers, operatic, and often madcap melodrama.
Midseason, I was afraid that the show was going to become perpetually stuck in neutral while it tried to slowly untangle countless story and relationship threads. But as the series barrels toward its conclusion, the writers, showrunners, actors, and production team behind Cape Fear seem to have collectively said “screw it. We’re going to entertain the hell out of you, realism-be-damned.”
This week’s episode, titled “Mongrel” in an overt ode to Max’s childhood struggles (more on that later), picks up immediately where Episode 6 left off. After Neveah is discovered to be (yes) living in the Bowden family’s walls, Anna grabs a gun from the family safe and holds her at gunpoint while Tom runs across the street to find Zack. Once there, Zack acts strangely affectionate towards Max, with Max reciprocating and telling Tom that Zack is no longer Tom’s son but is “my son now.” As you can imagine, Tom does not take the situation well and proceeds to beat the ever-loving crap out of Max in the middle of the street before Zack stabs his real father in the shoulder as the police arrive.
The next morning, Neveah is taken into custody and Zack is conveniently placed in a psychiatric facility. Although Max declines to press charges against Tom (insert the “Sure Jan” meme from The Brady Bunch Movie here), Anna’s boss Noa finally (FINALLY) admits that Max is bad news and must be stopped. She agrees to help the Bowdens while Anna’s coworker Ray is traces the plates on Max’s stalker’s car to a woman in North Carolina named Val. Ray, who I must mention here is not a private investigator, a police detective, or law enforcement officer of any sort, volunteers to drive all the way to North Carolina to follow up on the lead.
Meanwhile, Tom and Anna visit Zack’s psychiatric facility where they’re informed by a doctor that Zack has been drugged with a megadose of a motion sickness medicine (conveniently found in Neveah’s secret lair a the Bowdens’ house) that can have a brainwashing effect and lead to “permanent psychosis.” Well, at least now we (theoretically) know why Zack thinks Max is his dad.
Meanwhile, Natalie goes to stay with her biological dad to get away from the danger, but immediately returns home when her father reveals that he’s not sure whether or not Natalie is actually his daughter. Natalie confronts Anna with the revelation, who gives a less-than-convincing denial.
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