“Exodus” is an incredibly reminiscent and equally foreboding episode of Animal Kingdom. It asks viewers to not only consider the events that have transpired since the series premiered in 2016, but the events that previously transpired in the lives of these characters. Animal Kingdom has made a point to focus on the Cody family’s past and how each of these characters’ history drives where they may be headed following the crime thriller’s finale.
RELATED: Daniel Kaluuya Says He’d Rather Be A Bond Villian Than 007 Himself
One of the most unfortunate but striking scenes of “Exodus” is between Julia (Jasper Polish) and Baz (Darren Mann). After being thrown out of the house, Julia naturally turns to Baz for help. Afraid of repercussions from Smurf (Leila George) and unwilling to put anyone before himself, Baz turns her away. The scene is paired with Nine Inch Nails’ “Head Like A Hole.” The song is eerily telling, given the phrase that has loomed over Animal Kingdom for seasons. Smurf (Ellen Barkin) doted that the Codys should get what they want and never what they deserve. Given the fates that both Baz, Julia, and Smurf succumb to, the “Head Like A Hole” lyric, “You’re going to get what you deserve,” cast an ominous shadow over the scene and the final episode that is still come.
What “Exodus” also proposes is that Animal Kingdom and its viewers may have had a character more sympathetic than Pope (Shawn Hatosy), Deran (Jake Weary), or Craig (Ben Robson). Rather than one of the men, season 6 has suggested that some of Animal Kingdom’s sympathy deserves to go to Julia. Unlike her brothers, Julia refused to participate in Smurf’s game and was unfairly ostracized for it. Julia was forced to fend for herself and those are qualities J (Finn Cole) has picked up on. On paper, Julia and J aren’t that different, though J has certainly learned from the mistakes his mother and others involved with the Codys have made.
Prior to its use of flashbacks in season 4, Animal Kingdom never met Julia. Season 6’s introduction of Polish as teenage Julia has done a phenomenal job at exploring the relationship between the teenage girl, her mother, her brother (Kevin Csolak), Baz, and her involvement with alcohol and drugs. The difficulties of her relationship with the Cody family and the substances she struggled throughout the remainder of her life with, are not only useful to explain her complicated relationship with the Codys, but how J responds to them as well. “Exodus” proposes that perhaps the apple hasn’t fallen far from the tree and that perhaps J has had a greater plan all along.
Throughout Animal Kingdom, J has demonstrated his authority over his uncles, increasingly so after killing Smurf in season 4. Animal Kingdom’s final season has exemplified this tenfold, as J has continued to make plans behind his uncle’s backs. He has contingencies in place should Deran and Craig’s plan to spring Pope (Shawn Hatosy) fail, and it’s likely that J won’t even engage with their plan, opting to kill Pope and leave before his uncles can find him with the money he’s taken. These are skills he’s not only learned from watching Smurf, Baz, and his uncles, but what he may have picked up from his mother given her own complicated relationship with the Codys.
Aside from J and Julia, “Exodus” reminisces on Animal Kingdom’s past significantly. It reignites the close partnership between Deran and Craig, as the two prepare for the final heist the boys aim to pull together. From hitting the Oceanside waves to discussing each other’s relationships, and beating up tourists that look down on them, Animal Kingdom revisits the dynamic Craig and Deran shared early on in the crime thriller. The resemblance between Penny (Stevie Lynn Jones) and J’s original girlfriend Nicky, is too obvious to ignore, as is Penny’s willingness to fall into whatever scheme J has planned.
J’s relationship with each of his uncles is also becoming a recurring focus point, especially as Animal Kingdom heads into its finale. J continues to focus on his alienation from the Cody family as a child and as the man he has now become. Whether this is J’s way of eliminating suspicion from Penny and his uncles, it isn’t likely to go according to plan. Neither Craig nor Deran appear to trust J going into this final job and with Pope on their side, the three may decide that it’s time to do what they were unable to do to Smurf several seasons ago. Like J, Pope, Deran, and Craig may have learned from their mistakes and know how to take care of a threat as serious as J.
MORE: Finn Cole’s Animal Kingdom and Peaky Blinder Characters Aren’t That Different