Mr Inbetween S02e08 See You In Your Dreams 1080... Now

: An old friend takes the fall for past mistakes, while an associate is forced to pay for their own misdeeds.

She presses him on the key difference: is killing for your country as a soldier any different from killing for money in your own? For Ray, the distinction is meaningless. They talk about the ghosts of the past—the people he has killed and whether they haunt him. This is more than an idle chat; it's a setup for the episode's central question about the cost of violence. Mr Inbetween S02E08 See You In Your Dreams 1080...

See You In Your Dreams is the quiet before the violent season finale. It rewards patient viewers and acts as a masterclass in “show, don’t tell.” : An old friend takes the fall for

Reviewers often highlight this episode as a turning point for Ray's character, noting the "gut punch" ending and the realistic portrayal of the psychological toll that violence takes on its perpetrators. They talk about the ghosts of the past—the

Throughout the first two seasons, the relationship between Ray and his brother Bruce (played with incredible vulnerability by Nicholas Cassim) forms the emotional anchor of the series. Bruce suffers from Motor Neurone Disease (MND), a degenerative condition that has gradually stripped away his physical independence.

: An old friend takes the fall for past mistakes, while an associate is forced to pay for their own misdeeds.

She presses him on the key difference: is killing for your country as a soldier any different from killing for money in your own? For Ray, the distinction is meaningless. They talk about the ghosts of the past—the people he has killed and whether they haunt him. This is more than an idle chat; it's a setup for the episode's central question about the cost of violence.

See You In Your Dreams is the quiet before the violent season finale. It rewards patient viewers and acts as a masterclass in “show, don’t tell.”

Reviewers often highlight this episode as a turning point for Ray's character, noting the "gut punch" ending and the realistic portrayal of the psychological toll that violence takes on its perpetrators.

Throughout the first two seasons, the relationship between Ray and his brother Bruce (played with incredible vulnerability by Nicholas Cassim) forms the emotional anchor of the series. Bruce suffers from Motor Neurone Disease (MND), a degenerative condition that has gradually stripped away his physical independence.