Two rivals are forced to navigate a hall of mirrors where their reflections move independently, acting out the betrayals they are currently planning against each other.
Heavy use of cello and dissonant woodwinds that mimic the sound of wind through dead trees. Episode 6: Ill Met by Moonlight
The characters believe they are safe, but the moonlight (or lack thereof) reveals that the estate isn't just a house; it’s a living map of their own failures. In this world, "Ill Met" refers to the fact that everyone in the house starts seeing a different version of their companions—projections of who they wish those people were, versus who they actually are. Key Scenes: Two rivals are forced to navigate a hall
"Ill Met by Moonlight" is such a evocative title—borrowed from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night's Dream —that it suggests a collision of two worlds that were never meant to cross paths. In this world, "Ill Met" refers to the
After five episodes of building tension, the protagonists are forced to seek refuge in a "neutral zone"—an opulent, overgrown estate belonging to a reclusive figure known as The Dowager. It is the night of a rare lunar eclipse.
A dinner scene where the food is illusory. As the moon reaches total eclipse, the "glamour" fades, and the characters realize they’ve been sitting in a ruin, talking to empty chairs.