Under the Bridge Episode 7 Recap
Iâll admit: Even though Iâm familiar with the true story behind Under the Bridge, I never thought Iâd sympathize with Reena Virkâs killers. Even before the Hulu series told us who was responsible, I found myself shunning the perpetrators. I thought, Who could inflict such violence so flippantly? I thought Iâd feel vindicated when they faced the law. Instead, I ended up teary and heartbroken for Warren Glowatski, whose trial begins in episode 7 of Under the Bridge.
In the penultimate episode, we learn that Warren (portrayed by Javon Walton) is guilty. While the prosecution is questioning him, he says so himself. He kicked Reena (Vritika Gupta) while she cried for help. He commented on her body hair. He stood back and watched as Kelly Ellard (Izzy G.) delivered the final blows. He knew that his peers had gone too farâand still, he didnât help Reena. When the prosecution asks how heâd rate his involvement in Reenaâs death on a scale of one to ten, he gives himself a three for the kicks and âjust for being around.â
Like many of the kids on Under the Bridge, Warren was around that night because he lacked parental supervisionâor any guidance in his life, for that matter. His dad abandoned him to live with his girlfriend, leaving Warren behind to care for their home. Soon after, he got an eviction notice. On the day of Reenaâs assault, he lost his home for good. Rebecca Godfrey (Riley Keough) surmised the obvious: Warren couldnât cope with his challenges anymore. How could he? âWarren didnât know there were words like humiliation and shame, so he thought it was maybe anger,â she wrote. âThis emotion that he felt when he did things he would later regret.â
Though Warren takes part in Reenaâs beating, heâs one of the few kids who feel remorse in the following weeks. Before his trial, he speaks briefly with Rebecca, who isnât aware of the extent of his crimes. Heâs worried people will think heâs a monster. She disagrees. âThatâs not true; every single person Iâve talked to loves you,â she says. âNot Reenaâs parents,â Warren responds. âThatâs because they donât know you.â
For every Warren Glowatski, thereâs a Kelly Ellard. After a painful trial, Warren is sentenced to life in prison. Like the people in the courtroom, I felt both a sense of relief for Reenaâs family and a deep sorrow for Warren, who looks utterly lost. Under the Bridge clearly aches for both sides of this tragedy. Maybe Iâm just the kind of person whoâs suspicious of law enforcement yet roots for justice when violence occursâonly to remember why they were weary of the system to begin with.
Years ago, my uncle was murdered at a party. He was shot and left to die on the side of the road. The trial was brief, from what Iâve heard. To spare you the details: A lawyer asked some questions and the perpetrator was put behind bars. That was the end of it. We won. The system worked, right? To this day, I wonder if it really didâor if it even could, given such a tragedy.
As Rebecca suggests, those who villainize Warren simply do so because they donât know him. To them, he is a monster; to Rebecca, heâs a product of his environment. âWhy is it so crazy to see the side of him thatâs not just the one horrible mistake he made in his life?â Rebecca asks Cam (Lily Gladstone). Itâd be easy to dismiss Rebeccaâs pleas as overly sympatheticâor, even worse, TV hystericsâbut her question points to the heart of Under the Bridge. Itâs nature versus nurture, at its most tragic: Are humans really capable of pure evil? Or are we just victims of circumstance? Either way, do our mistakes define us?
Iâve never spoken to my uncleâs killer, and if given the opportunity, Iâd declineânot because Iâm angry but because Iâm scared I wonât hate him. Itâs much easier to think of people as nameless, faceless monsters. But who knows? Maybe he was also dealt a shitty hand and didnât know how to spin it. If someone asked him, maybe heâd also feel guilty for âjust being around.â For not choosing differently.
Justice is fickle. We have to choose to believe that our society is still capable of delivering itâbecause itâs too hard to imagine a world without justice. But is it up to us to define what is just? Perhaps thatâs why the Virks supported Warrenâs request for parole in 2010. People are too complex to be judged by rigid systemsâespecially ones who donât take all of the things that go into the human experience into account.
Next weekâs finale will feature Kelly Ellardâs trial. Unlike Warren, sheâs wealthy, has the best lawyers in town, and feels no remorse for killing Reena. If anything, she appears to be indifferentâwhich is somehow one of Under the Bridgeâs greatest horrors so far.
For every Warren Glowatski, thereâs a Kelly Ellard. As Under the Bridge reaches its finale, it clearly wants to show us this, which indicates that humans are truly capable of anythingâof good, bad, redemption, mercy, and even contempt. And that maybe instead of searching for justice, weâd be better off searching for understanding.