Itās a change in pace from The Tomb, but episode 5 of Moon Knight, Asylum, gives us a peek into Marc and Stevenās head, and an interesting slice of Ancient Egyptian culture.
Spoilers for episodes 1-4 of Moon Knight ahead.
The cliffhanger ending of
Moon Knight episode 4,
The Tomb, was certainly unexpected and a little bit mind boggling. After finding the stone figure the goddess Ammet is trapped in, Marc and Steven are shot and apparently killed by Arthur Harrow. But itās far from that simple, as Marc wakes up in what appears to be a psych ward, where Harrow is his doctor, and is told that his entire identity and adventure is a delusion. With his personality disorder far from secret, itās left uncertain as to which scenario is actually real. Things get even stranger when Marc runs into Steven outside of his body, and they, in turn, run into a talking Hippopotamus named Taweret (voiced by Antonia Salib).
The ambiguous ending of
The Tomb really has changed everything for the series. Regardless of what we think is Marcās real world, the character is an unreliable narrator now. Whatever we see from his perspective from here on, there will always be the lingering question of whether or not itās real. Visually, the episode quickly ditches the psychiatric ward setting in favour of two parallel journeys. The first is the one Tawaret takes them on ā sailing over a vast sea of sand. The other is a trip into the fractured mind of Marc, sifting through memories held by both him and Steven to reveal what really brought him to this point.
Theyāre both interesting, and interlinked, but they sadly canāt match the tomb raiding fun of the previous episode. Rather than a physical journey, itās an emotional one for the character. It delves into exactly what caused Marcās personality disorder and therefore Stevenās creation. Isaac does an excellent job of portraying two completely broken men discovering what lies in the dark corners of their shared mind. Itās written in the typical way journeys through memories tend to be ā every door leads to a new location and a new moment in time. But itās unoriginal because that technique is effective at flitting through those defining moments.

Ethan Hawke isnāt as present in this one, but when he is heās allowed to diverge nicely from his usual depiction of Arthur Harrow. The doctor version of the character is very mild mannered compared to the cult leader weāre used to. That probably doesnāt come as a surprise, but it does allow Hawke to show some more range than the role has previously allowed. Harrowās office in the psych ward is a location the episode keeps coming back to, not often enough to disrupt the main story, but just enough to maintain that sense of uncertainty that threw us at the end of
The Tomb. Marcās occasional visits to the doctorās office keep us guessing about who to trust.
This being a more emotionally-driven episode, thereās a noticeable lag in pace compared to
The Tomb. But
Asylum finally gives us the backstory weāve been waiting for, and it shows it to us rather than simply explaining through dialogue. That in itself makes it far more interesting than the first half of the show. Itās also not without its action, either, with some fun fights thrown in towards the end that allow the physically separate Marc and Steven to work together.
Thereās still much left unresolved, and only one episode of the show remaining.
Asylum tells us a lot about Marc Spector, but it leaves behind a lot of questions about how exactly the seriesā narrative arc is going to be tied up. Again it feels as though the show needs more time to deal with everything it aspires to deal with, and I can only hope next weekās finale doesnāt end up feeling rushed.
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