It was an overdue goodbye to a largely boring character, though no host is ever truly dead in Westworld - only decommissioned - so we can't rule out a comeback.
Teddy meanwhile, in a decision perhaps even more rash than William's, was so perturbed by Dolores' mission of revenge and her tampering with his settings that, instead of just re-jigging his settings and taking up crochet on a ranch, he promptly put a bullet through his own temple. Hit-series Westworld has returned for its second season and so has the head-scratching of puzzled viewers. Anyway, that's that sub-plot sorted, and William is now left to stagger through what remains of this quest he believes he has been put on by Ford, surely hoping there is more than just a chest containing a gilded shield and +200XP at the end. Westworld season 2, episode 1 review: It’s thrilling, dazzlingly confident stuff. This didn't make a whole heap of sense as William is certainly not the only one who has used the park to indulge in the rape and murder of robots, and had society deemed this morally wrong the park would have been closed before it even opened. Just as Clara Immerwahr, the real-life wife of the "father of chemical warfare" Fritz Harber, ultimately ended up killing herself, it would have made sense if Juliet had been driven to suicide by William's plan to essentially clone human beings without their knowledge, but instead the flashback suggested it was all down to his conduct in the park. There weren't actually any surprise twists here, Juliet having been driven to drink and ultimately suicide by William's mean streak, as we assumed.
It was a melodramatic moment in a very melodramatic episode, which centred around a flashback that told the story of William's wife Juliet's death. Westworld s first episode is bookended by potent opening and closing moments, blurring the divide between Dolores programmed self and developing consciousness, and its final shot is a smart.