The Intimacy of Sisterhood Gets the Treatment it Deserves on The Path

Hulu’s The Path is a powerfully good new series that brings up many questions about how we as individuals function within our families and within society, as a result of the relationship between personal faith and belief systems. Organized religion is taken to task in many ways, but like any good series, the grander issues (worship, cults, power) tend not to outweigh the more common and universal themes. There’s an especially lovely and haunting scene from the show’s latest episode, “Breaking and Entering,” that highlights the significance of familial intimacy, specifically that of sisterhood, for one character in particular.
Of all the show’s many fascinating participants in the Meyerist movement, Michelle Monaghan’s Sarah Lane might be the most difficult for some of us to connect with. Aaron Paul, as her husband Eddie Lane, is a much more relatable everyman. He wants to believe—for the sake of himself and for the good of his family—but he has doubts. Sarah, however, is steadfast in her faith in the movement. She’s not nearly as terrifying as the Meyerist leader (Hugh Dancy’s Cal), but we have a few reasons to be afraid of what she’s capable of doing. Early on in the season, when she thinks infidelity is threatening to tear apart her marriage, she confronts the woman she believes to be Eddie’s mistress. Sarah makes it clear that she will use her position of power to make sure this woman follows protocol, confesses or unburdens (and, most importantly, assuages her concerns) before she lets her leave that tiny cell.
There’s also her reaction to their son Hawk (Kyle Allen), who’s bringing in another to the ever-present faith, family and intimacy conundrums. While Eddie has been content to let Hawk navigate this difficult space between his physical and emotional feelings for a girl at school, and his faith, Sarah is in a state of panic. She is convinced that her son must not be left alone to deal with this crush—that it could result in his deciding to leave the movement, and the family. In her mind, Hawk is one make-out session away from pulling a Tessa. And in “Breaking and Entering,” (aptly named for both her intrusion, and Cal and Eddie’s) we finally get to meet the mysterious, long lost sister whose legacy weighs heavy on Sarah, and Sarah’s mom.
The scene begins with Sarah spying on Tessa and her children, as they hurry out of their brownstone in the city. There’s beautiful work on the musical composition here, from Will Bates. A heavy, organ-like note rings out, and pulsating sounds kick in as she lets herself into her sister’s home. Every room is the perfect room. Bright lighting invades the first floor, as Sarah encounters gorgeous steel frames holding memories of perfect days gone by; we see wooden toys for the children, and schedules stuck to the fridge for cheerleading and yoga. And because you can’t connect properly to your sister without knowing what she eats for leftovers, there’s a strange, lovely moment when Sarah opens a container in the fridge and holds it up to her nose.