As the curtain closes on the first season of North of North, episode 8, titled “Bad Influences,” shifts gears from the community-centric focus of earlier episodes to zoom in on the personal. It’s a slower, more introspective finale, rich in quiet tension and the kind of emotional weight that doesn’t always require dramatic action to leave an impact.
This chapter finds Siaja (Anna Lambe) standing at yet another personal crossroads. Now settled back into Ice Cove, she’s not just tending to wounds of the past but also wrestling with her place in the present. Her Polar Research pitch looms—symbolic of a future she’s not sure she wants anymore—and in the background, a quieter storm brews: her living situation.
The search for a new place to live serves as more than a logistical headache; it becomes a metaphor for transition. Siaja, having spent the past few episodes pouring herself into caring for Ting, is finally confronting the stillness that follows crisis. The question lingers: when survival mode switches off, what’s left? What does healing look like?
The episode leans heavily into the emotional friction between Siaja and Neevee, a character who has remained somewhat elusive in her motivations throughout the season. Their conversation here—charged, overdue, and laced with old wounds—forces both women to confront not just their feelings for each other, but the weight of what they’ve lost and what they still carry.
Anna Lambe’s performance is once again quietly commanding. She plays Siaja with a kind of interiority that makes you lean in, watching for every flicker of expression. When she finally speaks with Neevee, it’s not about closure—it’s about truth. The messy, unresolved kind. Their interaction doesn’t try to fix things, and that’s precisely what makes it powerful. Sometimes the best television doesn’t tie a bow around its stories. It leaves threads hanging just enough to feel real.
Elsewhere, we see Ting continuing his physical recovery and becoming more of a background presence—one that reminds us how much space he once occupied in Siaja’s life. While he’s no longer the center of her focus, his shadow still looms in her choices. Ting’s arc this episode is minimal, but it’s notable in how his absence now feels intentional—proof of Siaja beginning to carve out her own narrative again.
Meanwhile, Alistair (Billy Merasty) gets a brief but meaningful beat of reflection. After the emotional blow of episode 7, “Lost and Found,” where he’s forced to let go of his long-held feelings for Neevee, we now see a man beginning to recalibrate. There’s a softness to him in this episode, a tired kind of peace that’s earned, not given.
What sets “Bad Influences” apart from other finales is its refusal to offer dramatic fireworks. Instead, it banks on intimacy, discomfort, and the slow burn of choices made when no one is watching. There are no grand gestures here—just a woman quietly choosing not to run anymore. A woman choosing to be still, even if she’s not sure what stillness looks like yet.
Director Danis Goulet brings her signature restraint to this final episode. Every shot feels deliberate, echoing the solitude and clarity of the north. The snow and silence become characters themselves—backdrops to internal battles that are harder to see but deeper to feel.
By the time the credits roll, North of North hasn’t just wrapped up a season—it’s come full circle. What began as a story of escape becomes one of return. And in the stillness of Ice Cove, the thaw isn’t loud. It’s patient.
Final Thoughts
“Bad Influences” isn’t your typical season finale. It doesn’t scream for attention. Instead, it whispers truths about identity, place, and the long, often lonely work of becoming whole again. It reminds us that not all closure is clean, and not all healing looks like progress.
If this is the end of North of North Season 1, it leaves viewers not with answers, but with a feeling—one of quiet resonance, raw honesty, and the hope that even in a town this cold, the most important thaw happens inside.








































