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Brassic S05e05 Satrip -

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Brassic S05e05 Satrip -

The episode’s title is a pun, but it’s also a mission statement: it’s a through the psyche of working-class northern England. The Aftermath: The Come Down As with all Brassic episodes, the chaos eventually crashes into reality. The retreat is raided by a very real, very angry farmer whose prize bull the gang accidentally set free during their trip. The final act is a slapstick chase across the moors, with the gang still partially tripping, trying to wrangle a hallucinating bovine.

Best line: Carol, after the trip ends: “I saw God. He’s a bald man from Bolton, and he owes me twenty quid.” brassic s05e05 satrip

The episode ends on a quiet note. Sitting on the roof of the caravan as the sun rises, Vinnie and Erin share a cigarette. No big declarations of love. No fixes. Just the acknowledgement that they are all “messed up, but here.” “Satrip” is Brassic at its most experimental. It sacrifices some of the usual heist-driven plot for character depth and pure visual creativity. Joe Gilgun’s writing (he co-wrote this episode) shines brightest when he lets the absurdity become the vehicle for tragedy. The episode’s title is a pun, but it’s

Just when you think the lads of Hawley have run out of ways to catastrophically fail upwards, Brassic delivers one of its most ambitious, bizarre, and surprisingly tender episodes to date. Episode 5, titled does exactly what it says on the tin: it sends our favorite criminally-inclined misfits on a chaotic, hallucinogenic journey that blurs the lines between therapy, revenge, and a very bad hangover. The Setup: A “Spiritual” Solution After the high-octane fallout of previous episodes, Vinnie (Joe Gilgun) is fraying at the edges. His manic energy has shifted from entrepreneurial to self-destructive. Concerned (and exhausted), Erin (Michelle Keegan) and the gang stage an intervention of sorts. Their solution? Not a therapist—they can’t afford one—but a “shamanic retreat” organized by the ever-opportunistic Cardi (Tom Hanson). The final act is a slapstick chase across

Erin finally admits she’s terrified of leaving Hawley, not because she loves the town, but because she’s scared she’s becoming just as broken as Vinnie. Vinnie, in turn, admits he sees Jim (Steve Evets) as more of a father than his real one ever was—a confession he immediately tries to blame on “the fungus.”

Brassic airs Thursdays on Sky Max and NOW.

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The episode’s title is a pun, but it’s also a mission statement: it’s a through the psyche of working-class northern England. The Aftermath: The Come Down As with all Brassic episodes, the chaos eventually crashes into reality. The retreat is raided by a very real, very angry farmer whose prize bull the gang accidentally set free during their trip. The final act is a slapstick chase across the moors, with the gang still partially tripping, trying to wrangle a hallucinating bovine.

Best line: Carol, after the trip ends: “I saw God. He’s a bald man from Bolton, and he owes me twenty quid.”

The episode ends on a quiet note. Sitting on the roof of the caravan as the sun rises, Vinnie and Erin share a cigarette. No big declarations of love. No fixes. Just the acknowledgement that they are all “messed up, but here.” “Satrip” is Brassic at its most experimental. It sacrifices some of the usual heist-driven plot for character depth and pure visual creativity. Joe Gilgun’s writing (he co-wrote this episode) shines brightest when he lets the absurdity become the vehicle for tragedy.

Just when you think the lads of Hawley have run out of ways to catastrophically fail upwards, Brassic delivers one of its most ambitious, bizarre, and surprisingly tender episodes to date. Episode 5, titled does exactly what it says on the tin: it sends our favorite criminally-inclined misfits on a chaotic, hallucinogenic journey that blurs the lines between therapy, revenge, and a very bad hangover. The Setup: A “Spiritual” Solution After the high-octane fallout of previous episodes, Vinnie (Joe Gilgun) is fraying at the edges. His manic energy has shifted from entrepreneurial to self-destructive. Concerned (and exhausted), Erin (Michelle Keegan) and the gang stage an intervention of sorts. Their solution? Not a therapist—they can’t afford one—but a “shamanic retreat” organized by the ever-opportunistic Cardi (Tom Hanson).

Erin finally admits she’s terrified of leaving Hawley, not because she loves the town, but because she’s scared she’s becoming just as broken as Vinnie. Vinnie, in turn, admits he sees Jim (Steve Evets) as more of a father than his real one ever was—a confession he immediately tries to blame on “the fungus.”

Brassic airs Thursdays on Sky Max and NOW.