Mimi Keene and Asa Butterfield in the fourth and final season of Netflix’s ‘Sex Education’.Photo:Samuel Taylor/Netflix

Mimi Keene as Ruby, Asa Butterfield as Otis in Sex Education Season 4.

Samuel Taylor/Netflix

Warning: this post contains spoilers for the final season ofSex Education.

On Thursday, Netflix’s hit seriesSex Educationcame to a close as itsfourth and final seasonaired, and emotions ran high as the eclectic group of teenagers concluded their stories.

In July, creator Laurie Nunnannouncedthat a new season would be coming to Netflix in September, marking the return of the series after more than two years. Nunn also announced that the “fourth season will also be the final installment of our show,” noting that “as the themes and stories of the new season crystallized, it became clear that this was the right time to graduate.”

Nunn described the series, which she first devised in 2017, as “a show that would answer some of the questions we all used to have about love, sex, friendship, and our bodies. Something that would have helped our inner teenagers feel a little less alone.”

She added, “It’s been overwhelming seeing how the show has connected with people around the world, and we hope it’s made some of you feel a little less alone too.”

The popular group, dubbed the ‘Coven’, at the Moordale students new school, Cavendish College.Thomas Wood/Netflix

Sex Education Season 4

Thomas Wood/Netflix

As the stories of Netflix’s resident sex-obsessed teenagers wrapped up, Otis, Maeve, Eric (Ncuti Gatwa), Aimee (Aimee Lou Wood) and Adam (Connor Swindells) grappled with major life changes and some challenging identity-searching.

As Otis worked to win the election, he and Eric, who found a sense of community in Cavendish’s all-queer popular group, known as “the Coven” — Roman (Felix Mufti), Abbi (Anthony Lexa) and Aisha (Alexandra James) — faced their first real hurdle in their decade-long friendship. Eric confessed that he felt like Otis didn’t listen to him or care about what was happening in his life. Otis said he felt the same way, and the two decided to take some space from each other — though neither was particularly happy with that solution. In the end, though, they closed out the show thick as thieves — just as they started — after Otis admitted to Eric that he “couldn’t survive” without him.

It wasn’t just his friendship with Eric that Otis struggled with this season. After three seasons of buildup and almost’s, Maeve and Otis were finally sort of together. But, with Maeve abroad, the two struggled to keep their relationship — and intimacy — alive. Otis was jealous of Maeve’s friend, who turned out to be gay, and faced new challenges as he struggled with sexting, which Maeve was keen on.

Their long-distance troubles didn’t last long, though, as Maeve ended up rushing home after learning that her mother, Erin (Anne-Marie Duff), had overdosed again. Before Maeve and her older brother, Sean (Edward Bluemel), could see her, Erin died. The loss compounded Maeve’s ongoing challenges: her professor (Dan Levy) had told her not to “get her hopes up” about pursuing writing as a career; her relationship with Otis was withering; and she was back in Moordale, the place she was eager to escape.

As she struggled to process the loss — she didn’t cry until the day of Erin’s funeral — Maeve’s grief manifested itself in her staunch defense of her mother’s character to her brother, who was quick to disrespect his largely absent parent, and at the funeral.

Emma Mackey and Dan Levy star in season 4 of ‘Sex Education’.Thomas Wood/Netflix

Sex Education Season 4

In general, the funeral scene was a culmination of sorts that brought up several of the season’s ongoing themes all at once. Jackson’s anxiety over the lump in his testicles grew, and in a moment of panic, he nearly dropped Erin’s casket. (Him, Eric, Otis and Adam were pallbearers.)

He later learned that the lump was benign, but it had already piqued his interest about who his father was. Despite telling him he’d come from a sperm donor, Jackson eventually confronted his mothers, Sofia (Hannah Waddingham) and Roz (Sharon Duncan-Brewster), and learned that Roz had an affair with a married man and fell pregnant with Jackson as a result. It’s a confusing and emotional revelation for the family, especially since Jackson’s father denied having any interest in getting to know him to his face.

The intensity between Viv and her boyfriend, Beau, was also on display at the funeral, and Jackson’s concerns over his best friend’s relationship mounted as Beau rarely let Viv and Jackson have a moment alone.

Chinenye Ezeudu and Kedar Williams-Stirling in season 4 of ‘Sex Education’.Samuel Taylor/Netflix

Chinenye Ezeudu as Viv, Kedar Williams-Stirling as Jackson in Sex Education Season 4

The funeral scene also brought a long-awaited reunion for Eric and Adam, which was tense but heartwarming, as Adam shared that he’d finally come out as bisexual to his parents, but was struggling with the change. “Adam, you have to love yourself,” Eric advised his teary-eyed ex-boyfriend.

Throughout the season, Adam pushed himself in more ways than one. He dropped out of school and began working on a horse ranch, where he faced his fear of horses, met a girl who he confided in about his issues with his dad, Michael (Alistair Petrie), and even ended up scoring a date with her. Outside of work, he faced his fears, too. He and Michael were working on their relationship throughout the episodes, but eventually, Adam confessed how he really felt.

“I messed up at work today and the first thing that I thought is, ‘I’m gonna disappoint my dad,'" Adam told his father in a powerful scene. “You have made me feel like I’m s— at everything since I was born. I don’t wanna feel like a failure anymore because I’m not a failure. You’re a failure. You are just a sad man who does a job that he hates because he’s too afraid to do anything else. I thought you were actually interested in me but you weren’t. It was all just about getting back together with Mum. You don’t like me, so stop pretending.”

In the finale, Michael confessed his own truth, too. “I just don’t like myself and I’ve made you feel small because of that and I deeply regret it,” he admitted before he told Adam “I love you,” presumably for the first time ever, but certainly the first time ever onscreen.

Alistair Petrie and Conor Swindells in season 4 of ‘Sex Education’.Samuel Taylor/Netflix

Alistair Petrie as Michael Groff and Conor Swindells as Adam Groff in Sex Education Season 4

While Eric didn’t spend much time reflecting on his past with Adam in the final season, he did struggle with some major questions about his identity — namely, his relationship with God. After debating whether or not he wanted to get baptized, Eric proudly admitted in front of his Church that he wouldn’t do so until he was truly accepted for who he is — a proud gay man.

In the following scene, he ran into a woman (Jodie Turner-Smith) who had appeared to him multiple times throughout the season while he’d grappled with the decision about getting baptized. She revealed herself to be God — and told him that he was destined to spread the word of God, that it was his “calling.”

Eric’s “life’s work,” God said, would be to “change hearts and minds and let everyone know that I love them for who they are.”

“I made you this bright so that others would see in the darkness,” the God figure told an emotional Eric.

After sorting through their issues, Otis was the first person Eric told of his newfound path.

Ncuti Gatwa as Eric in season 4 of ‘Sex Education’.Samuel Taylor/Netflix

Ncuti Gatwa as Eric Effiong in Sex Education Season 4

While Otis struggled with many of his closest relationships, his mom Jean Milburn (Gillian Anderson) had her fair share of challenges, too.

After welcoming her newborn, Joy, at the end of season 3 in a scary, near-death birthing experience, Jean struggled to adjust to life as a mother of two. Though she denied it, she struggled with postpartum depression, and Otis called in his aunt Joanna (Lisa McGrillis) to help as his mother crumbled. At the same time, Jean was also juggling a new professional commitment, as she’d agreed to host a radio show despite being just eight weeks postpartum.

Eventually, Jean admitted that she needed help and started taking medication to treat her depression. In the season finale, she invited over banker-slash-“motorcycle man” Dan (Daniel Ings) — who she’d told Joanna she was 95% sure was Joy’s father — presumably to tell him about Joy. She also decided to continue on with her radio show, “Sexology,” despite taking a brief break — making both Otis and Joanna proud.

Gillian Anderson and Asa Butterfield in season 4 of ‘Sex Education’.Thomas Wood/Netflix

Gillian Anderson as Jean Milburn and Asa Butterfield as Otis Milburn in Sex Education Season 4

As for Aimee, who regularly stole the show with her ridiculous one-liners and quirks, the final season brought clarity and healing. Despite getting off to a rocky start, she found a strong friendship in Isaac at Cavendish, and he taught her to explore art. After an almost kiss, Maeve — who dated him on-and-off in seasons 2 and 3 — told Aimee she’d prefer if she and Isaac kept things platonic, so Aimee shifted her focus back to her art as she realized her passion for photography.

In a moving scene, she admitted that her traumatic experience on the bus in season 2 still haunted her — and she wanted to use her art to get past it.

“These are the jeans I was wearing on that day when I was assaulted on the bus. I keep meaning to throw them away but for some reason I can’t,” she confessed to Isaac. “Every day I feel more like myself, and that’s great. But sometimes it feels like even when I’m doing something I love, like eating ice cream, it feels like I’m still wearing them. Like it never goes away.”

The show ended with Aimee fully facing her fears. She put the dreaded jeans back on and had a photoshoot at the bus stop where things had all gone wrong before burning the denim.

With Maeve’s permission, she started to explore her feelings for Isaac, and pushed herself to kiss him despite her reservations about intimacy.

Aimee Lou Wood in season 4 of Netflix’s ‘Sex Education’.Netflix

Sex Education s4 recap

Netflix

As for Otis, who started the show feeling sexually stunted and completely alone, the devastating heartbreak Maeve left him with showed him for the first time just how much he could love — and just how much his work at the sex clinic had changed lives, his own included.

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All four seasons ofSex Educationare now streaming on Netflix.

source: people.com