The Terror Season 3 premieres on AMC+ and Shudder on May 7, with new episodes arriving weekly thereafter.
After a seven-year hiatus, AMC’s erudite horror anthology, The Terror, returns with another compelling season worthy of this franchise. Sticking to its stand-alone season format, Season 3 is based on novelist Victor LaValle’s much-praised 2012 novel, The Devil in Silver, and is the first contemporary tale of the trilogy. Where Season 1 theorized a supernatural fate for the doomed HMS Terror crew in 1845, and Season 2 wove folklore into the Japanese-American internment camps of WWII, Season 3 is firmly set in modern day Queens, New York. Through the experiences of rudderless musician Pepper (Dan Stevens), the season immerses viewers in America’s broken mental illness system via his 72-hour psychiatric hold at the decrepit New Hyde Psychiatric Hospital. While inside, he’ll be forced to face the darkest choices of his life… which may or may not be manifesting inside the ceilings and halls of the dank facility.
Effectively atmospheric and stacked with a cast of excellent character actors, including Judith Light (Poker Face), CCH Pounder (Avatar: Fire and Ash), and Aasif Mandvi (Evil), The Terror Season 3 works as both a mystery about what resides behind the facility’s locked silver door as well as an existential dark night of the soul for Pepper. For decades, he’s been skirting through life avoiding worthwhile attachments, but all of that avoidance ends at New Hyde… because, well, he’s got nowhere left to hide. Pepper’s sins will literally haunt him in the halls, fueled by his unchecked anger and guilt. And in keeping with prior seasons, Season 3 weaves in the supernatural and horror beats as a way to ultimately unpack the monsters that reside within our flawed humanity.
“November in My Soul,” the premiere episode written by LaValle, opens with a frightening hook as the tiny New Hyde staff discover a patient dead in their bed, mauled in the face, with rigor mortis having set in. What follows sets the grim tone for the series as the disheartening realities of the underfunded, under-serviced hospital are laid bare to the audience. This is the place that Queens native Pepper (underscored by Stevens’ slightly dodgy accent) will find himself in after beating up his girlfriend Marisol’s (Juani Feliz) ex. The cops who wrestle him into cuffs then divert him from police processing to New Hyde as an easier and less expensive way to deal with Pepper in a system overburdened with hotheads like him.
With Marisol angry at his overblown reaction, and with no one else to call, Pepper gets placed on a 72-hour psychiatric hold. If he complies with the rules laid out by facility administrator Dr. Anand (Mandvi), he’ll be free to go. He’s placed in the room and bed of the aforementioned recently deceased patient, and let’s just say the odds are not in Pepper’s favor. He’ll end up desperately trying to get out of New Hyde as his mandatory meds have him seeing creatures in the ceiling and red lines on the floor leading to a room with a locked silver door that no one wants to talk about.
Directed by modern horror great Karyn Kusama (Yellowjackets), and written by co-showrunners Chris Cantwell (Halt and Catch Fire) and LaValle (The Changeling), Season 3 is an unflinching descent into the desperate lives of the mentally ill who fall through the cracks of our broken healthcare system. A more realistic American horror story, this season makes it abundantly clear that funding or care for the mentally ill has not improved since the 1962 novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, or its 1975 cinematic adaptation by Miloš Forman. There’s a strong echo from that film in how New Hyde is depicted, but with extra claustrophobia and viscera. And like that film, it’s the friendships made inside between Pepper and fellow patients Dorry (Light), former engineer Coffee (Chinaza Uche), and angry Loochie (b) that will lead them together toward an exit… some with hope, and some without.
The whole season is suffused with an effective sense of dread and an interesting mystery that centers on New Hyde’s founder, Dr. Walter (John Benjamin Hickey). His draconian practices from the ’60s still haunt this facility in many ways, and ties Pepper’s situation to the freaky occurrences that will ultimately unfold across the season’s six episodes.
If the previous season of The Terror checked all your folk horror boxes, then Season 3 is sure to please as well. LaValle’s compact adaptation of his novel into series format satisfyingly retains the book’s themes, chills, and Pepper’s core examination of his flawed life. The talents of the ensemble cast give extra life to these characters in rich ways that will have the audience rooting for these people stuck in this horrible, real-life haunted house.


