Lily
- Episode aired Apr 26, 2015
- TV-PG
- 44m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Emma realizes Maleficent's daughter is her former childhood friend Lily and leaves Storybrooke with Regina to find her, as well as to rescue Robin from Zelena.Emma realizes Maleficent's daughter is her former childhood friend Lily and leaves Storybrooke with Regina to find her, as well as to rescue Robin from Zelena.Emma realizes Maleficent's daughter is her former childhood friend Lily and leaves Storybrooke with Regina to find her, as well as to rescue Robin from Zelena.
Jared Gilmore
- Henry Mills
- (as Jared S. Gilmore)
Kristin Bauer
- Maleficent
- (as Kristin Bauer van Straten)
Nicole Muñoz
- Young Lily
- (as Nicole Munoz)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe news story Emma sees states that Lily and her boyfriend robbed a Tom Thumb store. Tom Thumb is a chain of convenience stores located in various cities in Minnesota, and Tom Thumb is also a fairy tale character from English folklore about a man that was no bigger than his father's thumb.
- GoofsWhen Emma pulls her gun on Lily you can hear the sound of the gun cocking (pulling the hammer back). When you look at the gun the hammer is uncocked.
- Quotes
Regina Mills: [In Lowell, Massachusetts] Why did I go through the trouble of creating Storybrooke when I could have cursed everyone to live here?
- Crazy creditsThe opening sequence shows Emma's car driving through the forest.
- ConnectionsReferences Lost (2004)
Featured review
Nature and nurture
When 'Once Upon a Time' first started it was highly addictive and made the most of a truly great and creative premise. Really loved the idea of turning familiar fairy tales on their heads and putting own interpretations on them and the show early on clearly had clearly had a ball. Watched it without fail every time it came on and it was often a highlight of the week. Which was why it was sad when it ran out of ideas and lost its magic in the later seasons.
Season 4 had a lot to live up after Season 3 being as impressive as it was. At this early stage of the season, one can see a lot of promise, some may argue that it is capitalising on 'Frozen's' success but there is much more to the season than that. This promise was apparent from the get go, with a great season opener in "A Tale of Two Sisters". As far as the previous Season 4 episodes go, they were all decent to brilliant with the only small dip being "Family Business" and the best being the "Smash the Mirror" two parter and "Best Laid Plans".
"Lily" for me is a very good episode if a slight disappointment compared to some of the previous episodes. Other episodes do a better job advancing the story telling, though it sets up what's to follow quite well and the Author's role has advanced. Likewise with character development, apart from Emma and Lily.
Not an awful lot wrong with "Lily" actually. It does lack the emotional investment and complexity of other episodes though.
Belle (apart from her heartfelt chemistry with Gold) is a fairly bland character and Emma showing somewhat of a darker side feels a bit too sudden and with not enough build up.
On the other hand, Emma and Regina carry the bulk of the episode and show once again show that they work so well together and is much more than standard good versus evil territory. Gold as always is interesting and great fun to watch.
Chemistry between Emma and Lily has intensity and heart, as does Lily's back-story and the ending is still quite a shock, still throwing in another unforeseen revelation despite knowing Marian's true identity well before Robin does from being shown before in "Heart of Gold".
All the acting is strong, with particularly great performances from Jennifer Morrison, Robert Carlyle and Lana Parrilla. Rebecca Mader is on point as Zelena, as is Sean Maguire, while Agnes Bruckner fares credibly as Lily.
Furthermore, "Lily" is a very handsomely mounted episode visually, the settings and costumes are both colourful and atmospheric, not too dark or garish and never cookie cutter. It is photographed beautifully too. The music is haunting, ethereal and cleverly used with a memorable theme tune.
Writing has the right balance of humour, pathos, mystery and intrigue, or corn or cheesiness here. This aspect has come on such a long way since when 'Once Upon a Time' first started, much more complexity and nuance.
In summary, very good. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Season 4 had a lot to live up after Season 3 being as impressive as it was. At this early stage of the season, one can see a lot of promise, some may argue that it is capitalising on 'Frozen's' success but there is much more to the season than that. This promise was apparent from the get go, with a great season opener in "A Tale of Two Sisters". As far as the previous Season 4 episodes go, they were all decent to brilliant with the only small dip being "Family Business" and the best being the "Smash the Mirror" two parter and "Best Laid Plans".
"Lily" for me is a very good episode if a slight disappointment compared to some of the previous episodes. Other episodes do a better job advancing the story telling, though it sets up what's to follow quite well and the Author's role has advanced. Likewise with character development, apart from Emma and Lily.
Not an awful lot wrong with "Lily" actually. It does lack the emotional investment and complexity of other episodes though.
Belle (apart from her heartfelt chemistry with Gold) is a fairly bland character and Emma showing somewhat of a darker side feels a bit too sudden and with not enough build up.
On the other hand, Emma and Regina carry the bulk of the episode and show once again show that they work so well together and is much more than standard good versus evil territory. Gold as always is interesting and great fun to watch.
Chemistry between Emma and Lily has intensity and heart, as does Lily's back-story and the ending is still quite a shock, still throwing in another unforeseen revelation despite knowing Marian's true identity well before Robin does from being shown before in "Heart of Gold".
All the acting is strong, with particularly great performances from Jennifer Morrison, Robert Carlyle and Lana Parrilla. Rebecca Mader is on point as Zelena, as is Sean Maguire, while Agnes Bruckner fares credibly as Lily.
Furthermore, "Lily" is a very handsomely mounted episode visually, the settings and costumes are both colourful and atmospheric, not too dark or garish and never cookie cutter. It is photographed beautifully too. The music is haunting, ethereal and cleverly used with a memorable theme tune.
Writing has the right balance of humour, pathos, mystery and intrigue, or corn or cheesiness here. This aspect has come on such a long way since when 'Once Upon a Time' first started, much more complexity and nuance.
In summary, very good. 8/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- Jun 9, 2018
- Permalink
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content