I dont know if anyone has noticed this but up to this point of the story Theo has allways isolated her self and was almost emtionless. So when she has her breakdown she shows all her emotions and expresses them with her hands. Thats so genius to me.
I am a Theo with Luke tendencies ( I dated and almost had a baby with a Luke in rl.. ) and the emptiness Nell ultimately had to feel before acceptance.
Morning when i watched this scene for the first time i broke into tears. It really wrecked me because it was like she explained how i felt to me when i thought the words to describe my darkest moments couldn’t be formulated into words.
@@Bl00DY617 I just love how well she described it. I felt like I knew exactly what she was talking about. That thorough shame, the unbearable, insufferable shame, was actually BETTER than that HORRIBLE, EMPTY nothing.
If you deal with depression, well then this scene definitely hit you more. She described it perfectly. It's not just sadness. It's the emptiness and nothing you feel in your whole body. The numbness in itself is more painful than any any emotion.
Was just about to say this. This hit me really hard on an emotional level, it sums up basically everything you feel (or try to feel) and think when severely depressed. It was one of those few scenes where I stop whatever I'm doing and watch in awe.
Didn't knew who Kate Siegel was before "The Haunting of Hill House"... and she SLAYED with this particular scene/monologue... one of the rawest performances I've seen in any media, and she glowed showcasing the nakedness of the fear of death, loneliness and the darkness of human soul. And is exactly how it feels when you loose someone, pulling yourself together when you're tearing apart. Respect to Kate Siegel. "Theo" was a very strong yet complex character!
I find it interesting how she says "I wonder if that's what she felt" referring to Nell in the past tense but then says "if that's what mom feels" in the present tense
A lot of you think that she was describing Nell's depression but personally I disagree. I feel like she felt nothing because that's whats left of Nell. Literally empty. Her body is just there. The rest of her is left at Hill house.
Claire Bridget Villegas that’s likely the actual reason she felt nothing when she touched Nells body how ever the parallel with how someone who suffers from depression feels is undeniable and likely what the writers wanted to draw a connection to.
It was both. It was the fact that nothing was left in Nell, but if you've ever suffered from depression it is also a CLEAR allusion to what someone with that disease experiences. I personally have never seen any show describe it better.
@@EvangelionlovrIt's unbelievable how so many people think Theo is talking about depression. Depression is not a feeling of nothing. I have depression. It's a feeling of sadness. And yes we feel hopeless at times. But not nothing. It's so obvious here that Theo is talking about feeling the nothing of Nell because it's just her body. It's the feeling of after death. It's what makes sense here.
Most may not know but people who acknowledge and think of death constanstly, this is what they feel. This is the feeling the ironically drives many to suicide
So this isn’t healthy? Because this scene was the scariest to me when first watching the show. Hell, I was, from then on, drawn to Theo because I could identify so much with her.
This scene was hands down the best in the season. The raw desperation in her voice was just powerful. There was some really good acting in this series, but this was my favorite. The first time through I was just floored.
This is one of the best scenes I've seen that accurately describes depression. I've never been able to describe it, and this hits the nail on the head. It's not just about feeling sad. It's about trying to feel SOMETHING.
I wholeheartedly agree! This scene was everything to me. And it was the moment that I started to see the show differently. This has been one of the most well written shows that I've seen. And the acting, in this scene alone, is fantastic!
I just finished this series and this scene was so powerful and so unexpected that you really do have to just sit and listen the first time you watch it. Thanks for uploading it.
I want to rewatch this series strictly to see it with different eyes. But I replayed this scene a couple of times because it was such a pivotal point to understanding everything.
This scene was so powerful that I had to rewind and rewatch it a couple of times. I’m an atheist, I’ve accepted in my mind the idea that there’s nothing after death, but it still sometimes terrifies me when I catch myself thinking what it must be like to feel nothing and be nothing. The way Theo describes it is hands down the best way I’ve seen it described on screen. How even shame, grief and fear is infinitely better than feeling absolutely nothing in the dark. It highlights to me why life even at its worst is precious, because eventually it ends. Not to mention the acting is superb. I wish I had watched this series so much sooner.
The end is coming for us all regardless so the life part is only short so in the scheme of things it doesn't make much difference if its long or short, because its tiny compared to eternity. I had a near death experience & I felt EXACTLY what she was discribing, the worse bit is I was aware of nothing, I was also aware I was dead. Of course I didn't fully die otherwise I wouldn't be here to stay this. But I felt dead, my heart & breathing had stopped, my life had flashed before my eyes & I my brain felt like an old TV screen going off, to a tiny dot that vanished. The silence was deafening. It was utter nothing & it did not feel good at all. I was suicidal before that, but I got put off the idea, I was an atheist too, but then I read lots about near death experiences, & they so often fitted with peopled religious beliefs. Maybe all awareness goes after a few minutes, maybe those last minutes are manifestations of our earthly beliefs, but I felt the trap of some kind of soul deprived nothing, I worried it was purgatory, & while I am now an agnostic & not fully Christian, I am spiritual & it really helps. Even if its only for those last few seconds. I don't ever want to feel that bad again. Plus I lost the love of my life to cancer, & after losing a soulmate its hard to believe they don't exist & to carry on living. I like to believe my loved one is with God, even though eternal life freaks me out because I have depression & I don't want to carry on feeling that, but I hope for the sake of my loved one as they loved life so much. They deserve it, even if I have to suffer it.
This is the character monologue for me that effects me the most. I suffer from depression and anxiety and I’ve been to that point in my life when I just felt numb and it feels awful. You’d rather feel anything, even pain, because it’s better than feeling numb.
Since people are offering their interpretations, I'll offer mine: I believe that what Theo felt is what the afterlife is: nothing, black, and empty. Theo has always been able to feel things, she even takes some sort of pride in it. This was the first time she couldn't rely on her emotions that have always been with her; this is the first time that she couldn't feel something and what she could feel was a different type of nothingness. She explains it herself: She would rather feel that horrible shame than that type of nothingness again.
Well put, "different type of nothingness". For years I've tried to explain that void but saying "nothingness, empty, despair...etc" doesn't mean anything to someone who hasn't felt that different type that is so empty there aren't even words for that feeling, or rather state of being.
I've found this video helpful when trying to describe my major depressive dissociation to people. It astonished me when I first saw this because it's the closest description I've ever seen.
Thank you for uploading this. This scene is so intense. One of my favorite scenes of the entire season. This and Nell’s confetti speech in the red room
Depression and Clinical depression are VERY different. Almost everyone feels some form of depression in their lives, but what Nell suffered from was clinical depression. The literal reason she felt nothing was because of Nell being dead and there being nothing left in her lifeless body, but the parallel to what it feels like to suffer from clinical depression is impossible to ignore.
Oh probably one of the most emotional moments between a family, two sisters. Do everyone notice when she tried to prove herself innocent none but her own sister by saying "I didn't see him" and her eyes fabulous acting.
I'm currently re-watching this exceptional show and came here after episode 8 to say that this scene in particular was so powerful, so full of emotions to the point you can feel what the protagonist is going through. Kate Siegel is awesome, I really hope to see her more!
the power this scene holds , i feel Theo and Nell the most in this whole show.... it just resonates with me thinking though out my whole little life. Take one day at a time and feel free. 🧸🎈
Hace meses vi esta serie y la ame. Hace dos días mi padre falleció de un cáncer terminal, volver a ver esta escena es como si me dieran un puñetazo en el medio del pecho...
Watching this two months after my mother passed away was... depressing, to say the least. "What if thats what it is for all of us, when the time comes?" Oof.
As a suicide survivor (my younger sister-I loved her so SO much but she was bipolar and a clinical narcissist and didn’t give two shits about how she hurt our family) this show hit me very hard. The media rarely depicts what it’s truly like to deal with a “problematic” family member and what woundedness and mistrust and scars are created from years of broken promises and shattered false hope. It’s extremely refreshing to see a show actually stand up and say anything other than “well gee, they’re family, guess we go down with that ship! :)” because fuck you the world doesn’t work like that. This is shit I experienced first hand and I became numb, angry, and deeply bitter to my core. I also saw a LOT of myself in Theo. Down to the coping mechanisms and the breakdown. Very, very intense. Sorry if this is a bit... much-the scene just hit me pretty hard.
Darkness, numbness, alone... i'd add cold, eternal emptiness and the dread of having lost connection with yourself, and all life. Overflow of anguish and the most unbearable pain, but not in body, because you're a speck of light, floating in space with no control - forever, with no destination. She comes close though. I was there, could only describe it as the void. No sound, no energy or vibration no life. No words for it really...
It’s interesting to watch this about darkness and nothing being something bad but then also watching the very end of DARK when Jonas’ mom talks about her nightmare where everything went dark and there was no yesterday, today, tomorrow, anything but it was a good feeling.
A lot of people are talking about feeling nothing in their depression. I find it interesting how different peoples depression can be. For example, mine was just absolute pain and sadness. Nothingness here and there, but the majority pain.
We all know Katie Siegel stole this scene and did a phenomenal job! And as someone who has struggled, is struggling, with depression… yes this monologue hits. But also… let’s please give it up to Elizabeth Reaser as well… blank cold face… but at the end… there’s a single tear running down her cheek! This entire show was beautifully crafted and acted!
The atmosphere in the nighttime scenes in this particular episode felt much creepier than most of the other ones. They felt otherworldly. This might be one of the best episodes of the season, although I know the popular opinion is that most of the earlier ones are the best.
One of my fan theories is that it was actually the malevolent entity that walks Hill House Theo felt when she touched Nell. Since Hill house conquers and haunts all who enter it and its territorial and always seeking to feed on people to fill itself up. And maybe she was feeling what it feels since Nell was trapped in the house and belonged to it. She herself stated the red room was the stomach of the house and the houses intention is to feed on anyone who comes inside it in any way it can. And we know it feels no noteworthy emotions and has no love or empathy for anyone or anything.
Pat i would say the characters were a lot less traumatised in Bly manor. Hill house it’s set after the trauma whereas Bly Manor is set mostly before the trauma. You get a glimpse of it in the last episode of Bly though. I think they’re both very good just very different
I almost died once, for a few seconds/minutes I did. And thisis what I felt. It was exactly this. She discribed it so well this scene fucked me up. It was a long time ago & while it scared the crap out of me at the time & I couldn't slept for days as for the first time in my life I suddenly feared death, I did get over it. I rarely think of it now. But the worse part of it was that I was acutely aware of the nothingness. I hope that awareness would have gone if I had actually died, but in that time, I knew I was on the dead side of the brink & it was the worse dark void of nothing imaginable. I think its different for different people. But for me it was that. Next time I hope its more of a calling home to be reunited with my dead loved one.
This isn't about depression lol it is about being in that empty void of darkness for all eternity after death. She even says it. It makes the scene much more terrifying.
It is absolutely a metaphor for depression. Just like the scene when nell is talking about how she was screaming and asking for help and no one could see her. That scene and this one are both metaphors. It’s exactly how depression feels. Like nothing. Like your an empty shell and invisible to the rest of the world.
Some may describe this as death But Death has no feeling and some describe it as depression it’s similar but Worse I it describe hell separation from God and all that is good and warming to the Soul
I think that if she touches someone or something, she feels whatever emotion or feeling that a person or people have felt or left behind. Here, when she touched Nell's body, she felt nothing. No emotion whatsoever.
I dont know if anyone has noticed this but up to this point of the story Theo has allways isolated her self and was almost emtionless. So when she has her breakdown she shows all her emotions and expresses them with her hands. Thats so genius to me.
I am a Theo with Luke tendencies ( I dated and almost had a baby with a Luke in rl.. ) and the emptiness Nell ultimately had to feel before acceptance.
Yes love the hand gesturing
"That thorough fucking shame was so much better than that horrible, empty nothing" - God, that was beautiful 😭
Morning when i watched this scene for the first time i broke into tears. It really wrecked me because it was like she explained how i felt to me when i thought the words to describe my darkest moments couldn’t be formulated into words.
@@Bl00DY617 I just love how well she described it. I felt like I knew exactly what she was talking about. That thorough shame, the unbearable, insufferable shame, was actually BETTER than that HORRIBLE, EMPTY nothing.
I don't know why her sister was acting jealous , she knows theo's gay . I knew it wasn't anything sexual when I saw them .
If you deal with depression, well then this scene definitely hit you more. She described it perfectly. It's not just sadness. It's the emptiness and nothing you feel in your whole body. The numbness in itself is more painful than any any emotion.
Anhedonia 😐
I feel it, I have depression, now I’m better but gosh How identify I feel with that feeling of emptiness and solitude
Yes. 100% yes.
Yes.
Truly nothing
I was hoping someone would upload this scene. Thank you. It's probably the scene that hit me the hardest in the whole show.
Same
Szaam me too! I wish they’re not coughing at the background though...
What episode was this?
Bea Trixx episode 8
honestly this did hit me the hardest too and made me tear up a bit like holy fuck🤧
this is a good showing of how depression feels as well...thank you for clipping and posting this
Was just about to say this. This hit me really hard on an emotional level, it sums up basically everything you feel (or try to feel) and think when severely depressed. It was one of those few scenes where I stop whatever I'm doing and watch in awe.
Exactly my thought too
Didn't knew who Kate Siegel was before "The Haunting of Hill House"... and she SLAYED with this particular scene/monologue... one of the rawest performances I've seen in any media, and she glowed showcasing the nakedness of the fear of death, loneliness and the darkness of human soul. And is exactly how it feels when you loose someone, pulling yourself together when you're tearing apart. Respect to Kate Siegel. "Theo" was a very strong yet complex character!
She also was in a movie called hush you should check it out
@@YoungForever7168 saw the movie last year on Netflix right after the show. thnx.
@GerbKarma right I loved it I've watched it like 3 to 4 times
This was the time I was surprised for her acting skill
What episode was this?
@@beatrixx131 I don't remember it clearly, sorry. I think is the one wich goes after Nell's funeral
@@beatrixx131 Episode 8: Screaming Marks
Oh you should watch hush
@@Alter_Dan_K witness marks* not screaming ahaha that's ep. 9 screaming meemies
I find it interesting how she says "I wonder if that's what she felt" referring to Nell in the past tense but then says "if that's what mom feels" in the present tense
A lot of you think that she was describing Nell's depression but personally I disagree. I feel like she felt nothing because that's whats left of Nell. Literally empty. Her body is just there. The rest of her is left at Hill house.
Claire Bridget Villegas that’s likely the actual reason she felt nothing when she touched Nells body how ever the parallel with how someone who suffers from depression feels is undeniable and likely what the writers wanted to draw a connection to.
If you’ve seen any of Mike Flanagan’s other work, it’s never just the obvious. So yes, it’s also about depression, and death, etc.
Its both. Both her body being a shell due to her soul being trapped, but also an expression of depression and how it affects a lot of people.
It was both. It was the fact that nothing was left in Nell, but if you've ever suffered from depression it is also a CLEAR allusion to what someone with that disease experiences. I personally have never seen any show describe it better.
@@EvangelionlovrIt's unbelievable how so many people think Theo is talking about depression. Depression is not a feeling of nothing. I have depression. It's a feeling of sadness. And yes we feel hopeless at times. But not nothing. It's so obvious here that Theo is talking about feeling the nothing of Nell because it's just her body. It's the feeling of after death. It's what makes sense here.
"And I'm just....I'm just floating in this ocean of nothing"
Most may not know but people who acknowledge and think of death constanstly, this is what they feel. This is the feeling the ironically drives many to suicide
So this isn’t healthy? Because this scene was the scariest to me when first watching the show. Hell, I was, from then on, drawn to Theo because I could identify so much with her.
I re-watch this religiously...It explains so precisely how I feel every day.
I know your comment was a year ago but i hope you're okay
❤
I hope you are feeling better
Hang in there bud, there’s light at the end.
"I didn't know you were a- into uh"
Me: Women?
"Bridesmaids"
Me: *DIES*
LOL yeah but I think she actually says " We didn't know"
This scene was hands down the best in the season. The raw desperation in her voice was just powerful. There was some really good acting in this series, but this was my favorite. The first time through I was just floored.
This and Nell’s at the end. Had me bawling. This show will forever be a masterpiece in my mind. It should have won Golden Globes
This is one of the best scenes I've seen that accurately describes depression. I've never been able to describe it, and this hits the nail on the head. It's not just about feeling sad. It's about trying to feel SOMETHING.
I wholeheartedly agree! This scene was everything to me. And it was the moment that I started to see the show differently. This has been one of the most well written shows that I've seen. And the acting, in this scene alone, is fantastic!
Agree with everything here.
I just finished this series and this scene was so powerful and so unexpected that you really do have to just sit and listen the first time you watch it. Thanks for uploading it.
I want to rewatch this series strictly to see it with different eyes. But I replayed this scene a couple of times because it was such a pivotal point to understanding everything.
This scene was so powerful that I had to rewind and rewatch it a couple of times. I’m an atheist, I’ve accepted in my mind the idea that there’s nothing after death, but it still sometimes terrifies me when I catch myself thinking what it must be like to feel nothing and be nothing. The way Theo describes it is hands down the best way I’ve seen it described on screen. How even shame, grief and fear is infinitely better than feeling absolutely nothing in the dark. It highlights to me why life even at its worst is precious, because eventually it ends. Not to mention the acting is superb. I wish I had watched this series so much sooner.
I hope you soon come to realize that there's a beautiful afterlife that awaits you after this life. May you find Jesus🙏🏼 and comfort in the Lord 🖤
The end is coming for us all regardless so the life part is only short so in the scheme of things it doesn't make much difference if its long or short, because its tiny compared to eternity. I had a near death experience & I felt EXACTLY what she was discribing, the worse bit is I was aware of nothing, I was also aware I was dead. Of course I didn't fully die otherwise I wouldn't be here to stay this. But I felt dead, my heart & breathing had stopped, my life had flashed before my eyes & I my brain felt like an old TV screen going off, to a tiny dot that vanished. The silence was deafening. It was utter nothing & it did not feel good at all. I was suicidal before that, but I got put off the idea, I was an atheist too, but then I read lots about near death experiences, & they so often fitted with peopled religious beliefs. Maybe all awareness goes after a few minutes, maybe those last minutes are manifestations of our earthly beliefs, but I felt the trap of some kind of soul deprived nothing, I worried it was purgatory, & while I am now an agnostic & not fully Christian, I am spiritual & it really helps. Even if its only for those last few seconds. I don't ever want to feel that bad again. Plus I lost the love of my life to cancer, & after losing a soulmate its hard to believe they don't exist & to carry on living. I like to believe my loved one is with God, even though eternal life freaks me out because I have depression & I don't want to carry on feeling that, but I hope for the sake of my loved one as they loved life so much. They deserve it, even if I have to suffer it.
@@tacotaco8863 there’s no evidence of that
@@tacotaco8863reincarnation
I haven't cried like I cried to this scene in a longest time.
I knew from episode 3 that Theo was gonna be my fave out of the all of the siblings. But episode 8....this right here sealed the deal.
Kate Siegel is simply exceptional
This is the character monologue for me that effects me the most. I suffer from depression and anxiety and I’ve been to that point in my life when I just felt numb and it feels awful. You’d rather feel anything, even pain, because it’s better than feeling numb.
Probably one of the best well-acted monologues i have ever had the pleasure of watching
This is literally Spoken Word Poetry in cinematic form. Incredible writing.
Explains depression pretty well lol.
Since people are offering their interpretations, I'll offer mine: I believe that what Theo felt is what the afterlife is: nothing, black, and empty. Theo has always been able to feel things, she even takes some sort of pride in it. This was the first time she couldn't rely on her emotions that have always been with her; this is the first time that she couldn't feel something and what she could feel was a different type of nothingness. She explains it herself: She would rather feel that horrible shame than that type of nothingness again.
Well put, "different type of nothingness". For years I've tried to explain that void but saying "nothingness, empty, despair...etc" doesn't mean anything to someone who hasn't felt that different type that is so empty there aren't even words for that feeling, or rather state of being.
I think it was Nell’s depression and what the house did to her, not her afterlife
EVery now and then I come back and watch this scene and every time I see it I can’t hold back tears. What an incredible actress
Most memorable scene for me in all episodes
I love it
I love how raw and powerful this scene was, it made me feel so emotional 💔
I love this scene. It makes you sit up and take notice
this still gives me chills hearing it, even from the first sentence i get chills.
this scene made me bawled my eyes out. She is such a great actress.
I've found this video helpful when trying to describe my major depressive dissociation to people. It astonished me when I first saw this because it's the closest description I've ever seen.
Pure raw emotion.
No matter how many times I watch this, I always end up crying. Such a powerful scene.
Thank you for uploading this. This scene is so intense. One of my favorite scenes of the entire season. This and Nell’s confetti speech in the red room
What a beautiful monologue. So well-written. Beautiful yet terrifying.
She is describing death. She has felt depression before.
Depression and Clinical depression are VERY different. Almost everyone feels some form of depression in their lives, but what Nell suffered from was clinical depression. The literal reason she felt nothing was because of Nell being dead and there being nothing left in her lifeless body, but the parallel to what it feels like to suffer from clinical depression is impossible to ignore.
i felt extremely attacked when watching this scene.
This scene and the (freaking viceral) scream Theo gave when she touched Nells body chilled me to the bone emotion-wise.. Tremendous acting here!
Oh probably one of the most emotional moments between a family, two sisters.
Do everyone notice when she tried to prove herself innocent none but her own sister by saying "I didn't see him" and her eyes fabulous acting.
I'm currently re-watching this exceptional show and came here after episode 8 to say that this scene in particular was so powerful, so full of emotions to the point you can feel what the protagonist is going through. Kate Siegel is awesome, I really hope to see her more!
This scene breaks my heart every time
the power this scene holds , i feel Theo and Nell the most in this whole show.... it just resonates with me thinking though out my whole little life. Take one day at a time and feel free. 🧸🎈
I can hear who ever is filming this crying
One of the best monologues ever to grace the silver screen.
She just described the depression 😥
Kate’s acting hit me hard! Jeez this is amazing! Will never forget this scene!
Hill House was a great show. This was one of my favorite scenes and I became such a huge fan of Kate Siegel after this moment.
God that delivery is so good it makes me ball my eyes out
Loved this scene. This scene got me watching every episode. So deep.
What if that's what it is, for all of us...when the time comes.
Hace meses vi esta serie y la ame.
Hace dos días mi padre falleció de un cáncer terminal, volver a ver esta escena es como si me dieran un puñetazo en el medio del pecho...
Watching this two months after my mother passed away was... depressing, to say the least. "What if thats what it is for all of us, when the time comes?" Oof.
I take it as her remaining body was an empty shell there but her spirit lives on. That's what I immediately thought. Our spirit goes right on living
As a suicide survivor (my younger sister-I loved her so SO much but she was bipolar and a clinical narcissist and didn’t give two shits about how she hurt our family) this show hit me very hard. The media rarely depicts what it’s truly like to deal with a “problematic” family member and what woundedness and mistrust and scars are created from years of broken promises and shattered false hope. It’s extremely refreshing to see a show actually stand up and say anything other than “well gee, they’re family, guess we go down with that ship! :)” because fuck you the world doesn’t work like that. This is shit I experienced first hand and I became numb, angry, and deeply bitter to my core. I also saw a LOT of myself in Theo. Down to the coping mechanisms and the breakdown. Very, very intense.
Sorry if this is a bit... much-the scene just hit me pretty hard.
No Queen It wasn’t too much. I’d listen to you talk everyday of the week if you wanted me to 💯 ☺️
Praying for you and your family 💗
@aiotennyo No love It wasn’t too much. I’d listen to you talk everyday of the week if you wanted me to 💯 ☺️
Her acting was on point! Theodora is my favourite among those siblings
Oh she ATE that
never thought this show would leave me in emotional turmoil 😭
Darkness, numbness, alone... i'd add cold, eternal emptiness and the dread of having lost connection with yourself, and all life. Overflow of anguish and the most unbearable pain, but not in body, because you're a speck of light, floating in space with no control - forever, with no destination. She comes close though. I was there, could only describe it as the void. No sound, no energy or vibration no life. No words for it really...
Notice how she says “and that’s what mom feels” in the present tense.
This is exactly how depression feels like.
I have adored this show since episode 1, but this scene legitimately brought me to tears and made me a diehard fan. Kate Siegel nailed it.
Such a great moment. Her acting drove that scene home, hard
It’s interesting to watch this about darkness and nothing being something bad but then also watching the very end of DARK when Jonas’ mom talks about her nightmare where everything went dark and there was no yesterday, today, tomorrow, anything but it was a good feeling.
The music is so beautiful
Some call me weird when I tell them this but, I rewatch this scene over and over when I’m depressed or giving up
A lot of people are talking about feeling nothing in their depression. I find it interesting how different peoples depression can be. For example, mine was just absolute pain and sadness. Nothingness here and there, but the majority pain.
This show is so powerful.
Anyone who has been through depression knows what this feels like.
Best scene in the whole show
We all know Katie Siegel stole this scene and did a phenomenal job! And as someone who has struggled, is struggling, with depression… yes this monologue hits. But also… let’s please give it up to Elizabeth Reaser as well… blank cold face… but at the end… there’s a single tear running down her cheek!
This entire show was beautifully crafted and acted!
Shirley is so scared this whole time. She can't even bring herself to do anything.
This is my fave scene
The atmosphere in the nighttime scenes in this particular episode felt much creepier than most of the other ones. They felt otherworldly. This might be one of the best episodes of the season, although I know the popular opinion is that most of the earlier ones are the best.
Take a sip everything Theo says "nothing"
I’ve seen this video so many times and this is the first time I noticed that the person filming was crying
I fucking sobbed during this scene.
Season 1 Episode 8
Witness marks...
Damn that acting ❤️❤️😭😭😭😭
TBH I thought this was gonna be a crash course of her character, or a "breakdown" when I read the title. But boy, am I gobsmacked. In a pleasant way
THIS is the :"to not be okay". Unconditional love helps take rhe edge off THIS -perpetual- state of being
This is treatment resistant depression.
One of my fan theories is that it was actually the malevolent entity that walks Hill House Theo felt when she touched Nell. Since Hill house conquers and haunts all who enter it and its territorial and always seeking to feed on people to fill itself up. And maybe she was feeling what it feels since Nell was trapped in the house and belonged to it. She herself stated the red room was the stomach of the house and the houses intention is to feed on anyone who comes inside it in any way it can. And we know it feels no noteworthy emotions and has no love or empathy for anyone or anything.
I feel like this, I feel like a hollow shell.
This scene broke me
Great scene.
Bly Manor lacked this raw expression of emotion.
Pat i would say the characters were a lot less traumatised in Bly manor. Hill house it’s set after the trauma whereas Bly Manor is set mostly before the trauma. You get a glimpse of it in the last episode of Bly though. I think they’re both very good just very different
This is treatment resistant depression. The literal, ice cold in your veins definition.
Of course Mike Flanagan gave his wife the best acted scene of the entire show!
I almost died once, for a few seconds/minutes I did. And thisis what I felt. It was exactly this. She discribed it so well this scene fucked me up. It was a long time ago & while it scared the crap out of me at the time & I couldn't slept for days as for the first time in my life I suddenly feared death, I did get over it. I rarely think of it now. But the worse part of it was that I was acutely aware of the nothingness. I hope that awareness would have gone if I had actually died, but in that time, I knew I was on the dead side of the brink & it was the worse dark void of nothing imaginable. I think its different for different people. But for me it was that. Next time I hope its more of a calling home to be reunited with my dead loved one.
Depression squad team up!
Just imagine if she was just bullshitting to cover the truth, this would be a mad convincing lie.
This isn't about depression lol it is about being in that empty void of darkness for all eternity after death. She even says it. It makes the scene much more terrifying.
It is absolutely a metaphor for depression. Just like the scene when nell is talking about how she was screaming and asking for help and no one could see her. That scene and this one are both metaphors. It’s exactly how depression feels. Like nothing. Like your an empty shell and invisible to the rest of the world.
You are So Beautiful and So Pretty
now that is acting!
Some may describe this as death But Death has no feeling and some describe it as depression it’s similar but Worse I it describe hell separation from God and all that is good and warming to the Soul
What episode was this again?
Episode 8 or 9 I believe
Episode please???? Thank you
S1Ep.8 “Witness Marks”
Hey Lisa D What Theo Doing She is Cry Was Theodoora Say To Her Sister She Has Breakdown She Feel The Death Body Person Skin
Whenever someone says Bly Manor is better I will show them this.
I say they are both great shows but very different so I don't see the point of comparing the two.
Poor Theo
I keep on imagining how this whole scene would go when Theo was her child self
What happen if she tuch someone?
Sorry i know my english is bad 😅😅
I think that if she touches someone or something, she feels whatever emotion or feeling that a person or people have felt or left behind. Here, when she touched Nell's body, she felt nothing. No emotion whatsoever.
@@maxine9015 correct :)