Entertainment
Even Sydney Sweeney Is Unsatisfied With The Euphoria Finale
By TeeJay Small
| Published

I recently wrote about the show Euphoria, and highlighted some of the ways that the series has been absolutely insane from the very beginning. Despite my insistence that the HBO show has been bonkers from day one, I can admit that the third and final season has taken things to bizarre places that would feel entirely alien to a day one viewer. Apparently, even series lead Sydney Sweeney feels this way, as she articulated in a recent discussion with Variety. As it turns out, nobody is happy with how Euphoria ended, including the main talent behind the series’ success.
When asked if she felt satisfied with her character’s final moments, Sweeney replied “I don’t think I’ll ever be satisfied with where Cassie ended up, just because I know there is more to tell of Cassie’s story … I don’t think that feeling will ever go away. I’ll always be wondering what Cassie is up to in Euphoria-verse.” In fairness, Sweeney expressed that she has similar sentiments about all of her characters, especially those whom she becomes attached to after playing for years at a time, such as Cassie.
Cassie’s Egregious Evolution
In case you missed it, Cassie has one of the most off-the-walls storylines in the entire show. Season one of Euphoria sees her behaving as a relatively normal high school girl who occasionally experiments with party drugs and lusts after college boys. When compared to Rue’s drug trafficking operation and Jules’ affinity for meeting adult predators over the internet, Cassie’s story seems as mild as something you’d find on daytime TV 20 years ago.
Of course, Sydney Sweeney quickly began to display some serious star power by the time the second season of Euphoria released, resulting in her taking a significantly larger role. That season saw her having multiple emotional breakdowns after shacking up with her best friend’s ex, and fighting with her sister after she becomes the subject of a satirical theater show. By season three, however, Cassie is a married OnlyFans model, who eats out of a dog bowl, grows to Godzilla heights, and pops up on podcasts to drop ableist slurs.
Trapped In Her Own Dollhouse
The character’s final moments involve losing her husband after he’s buried alive and choked out by a snake, making a million dollars to exchange with a cartel boss, and opening a content house with a harem of aspiring nude cam models. This is like a character arc you’d see on 30 Rock as a satirical example of bad TV. By the time Euphoria rolls credits on the final episode, Cassie has undergone basically no growth, no change, and her only accomplishment is that she’s shed enough tears to fill an olympic sized swimming pool.
Elsewhere in Sydney Sweeney’s Variety interview she expresses her own view on Cassie’s ending, stating “She’s trapped in her own dollhouse. She got everything she seemingly wanted, but she’s back at the same place she started.” Sweeney also articulates that she enjoyed playing a character as frenetic and crazy as Cassie, and says that she’d like to “find more characters like that” in the future. Now that she’s running her own production company, maybe we’ll see more of this character outside of the original show. It really just depends on exactly how disappointed Sweeney is with Sam Levinson‘s writing.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login