The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power S01e07 Satrip |link| May 2026
The Stranger (The Meteor Man) is gravely wounded by the Mystics. As the caravan moves on, Nori is forced to make an impossible choice. The Harfoot motto is "No one walks alone" —but the reality is they leave people behind.
The title “The Eye” is a masterful double entendre. Obviously, it refers to the physical shape of the caldera and the looming shadow of Sauron’s future gaze. But more poignantly, it refers to the survivors having to look at what they’ve lost. Halbrand looks at the Southlands and sees a throne of ash. Galadriel looks at the same land and sees the fortress she failed to stop. Much of this episode rests on a wounded, delirious Galadriel. As she drags a dying Halbrand toward what remains of the Ostirith watchtower, the lines between reality and vision blur.
And the truth is brutal: Halbrand is hiding something. While she nurses his wound, we get lingering close-ups. Is he a king? A rogue? Or something far older and fouler? Episode 7 doesn’t confirm the "Halbrand is Sauron" theory outright, but it lights a massive match under it. His whispered words in her ear— “Not all who wonder are lost” —feel less like comfort and more like a threat. On the other side of the map, the Harfoots are facing their own apocalypse. The ash from the Southlands has drifted across the sea, darkening the sky and killing the groves. The migration cannot wait. the lord of the rings: the rings of power s01e07 satrip
This is where the episode gets psychological. Galadriel sees her brother Finrod, who reminds her that sometimes the light touches the darkness not to destroy it, but to reveal the truth.
The sound design is equally oppressive—the constant crackle of embers, the groan of collapsing rock, the silence where birds used to sing. As penultimate episodes go, "The Eye" is slow, sad, and necessary. It doesn't have the action of "Udûn," but it has the weight. We finally understand the scale of the loss. The Stranger (The Meteor Man) is gravely wounded
Nori stays with the Stranger. It’s a beautiful, heartbreaking decision. She chooses friendship over safety, effectively becoming an outcast. Meanwhile, Poppy sings a lament that will absolutely break your heart. It’s the most "Tolkien" moment of the series so far—small people facing big sorrows with simple courage. In Númenor, we don’t get the triumphant return we expected. Queen Regent Míriel arrives back at the camp not on a horse, but carried on a stretcher. The eruption blinded her. She is now the Blind Queen.
This is a stunning change from the lore (where she loses her sight much later), but it works dramatically. The character who argued for staying in the West is now physically cut off from the light. Meanwhile, Elendil (who is quickly becoming the MVP of the human storyline) watches his son Isildur’s horse return without its rider. Isildur is presumed dead under the rubble. The title “The Eye” is a masterful double entendre
If Episode 6 (“Udûn”) was the fire, Episode 7 (“The Eye”) is the smoldering aftermath. In the wake of Mount Doom’s catastrophic eruption, the Southlands are no more. In their place? A blighted, ash-choked wasteland that will one day be known as .