: Joseph’s confrontation with his past is visceral. Stephen Graham conveys a sense of "pre-trauma"—the body remembering what the mind has tried to bury. The way he physically shrinks in certain environments highlights the theme of the inner child being perpetually stuck in the moment of the original wound.
The third episode of (2019) is a masterclass in tension, trauma, and the harrowing weight of memory. While the series begins with Joseph’s (Stephen Graham) spiral into alcoholism and his search for family, Episode 3 is where the central mystery—the "black hole" of his childhood—finally begins to reveal its jagged edges. "The Virtues" Episode 3(2019)
: This is perhaps the most pivotal scene in the series. The dynamic between Joseph and Craigy (Frankie Wilson) is fraught with a shared, unspoken history. It’s a study of how two people can be damaged by the same environment but manifest that damage in polar opposite ways—one through self-destruction, the other through a terrifying, quiet volatility. : Joseph’s confrontation with his past is visceral