As fans of the From anxiously await season 4, MGM+ and director Jack Bender (Lost) have released a specific list of episodes to rewatch. Each holds key moments and clues capable of shaping the next chapter, revisiting major traumas, story gaps, and moments worthy of deeper explanation.
It also highlights unresolved mysteries, repeated themes, and story beats that suddenly look different after the season 4 trailer. Moreover, it looks like they point directly to one character’s growing story-walking ability and the events she could revisit next.
Let’s look at those 10 key episodes of From before season 4 arrives on MGM+ and see why they matter.
Season 1, episode 1
Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Credit: MGM+
Episode 1 of the series introduces us to a strange, rundown town, its core rules for surviving, and the deadly monster threats residents face each night. Come sundown, if you’re not inside, you’re dead, and if you are inside and open a door or window for one of the smiling, bloodthirsty humanoid creatures, you’re dead. Survival here means following strict protocol, as the newly arrived Matthews family quickly learns.
The theory here is that Julie Matthews can storywalk—i.e., time travel and interact with past events—back to those early moments in the woods and come face-to-face with the young monster that later asks her if she recognizes him. If that happens, we could be looking at a whole new layer to one of the show’s earliest mysteries.
Season 1, episode 7
All Good Things
Credit: MGM+
Rules are violated and the illusion of safety dissipates. A massacre at the Colony House proves the monsters aren’t just external threats who hunt and perform. They’re also internal threats who infiltrate, observe, and weaponize human weaknesses, settling inside the cracks of human behavior.
Julie’s traumatic escape from the tree carries heavy emotional weight but also leaves space for the series to revisit the moment in a new way. If “Future Julie” appears during that sequence, it could turn one of the biggest episodes into an even more important chapter.
Season 1, episode 8
Broken Windows, Open Doors
Credit: MGM+
Episode 8 digs into Boyd and his late wife’s history, as well as the crucial discoveries regarding the talismans and survival, which are key to understanding how the town functions. After suffering a mental breakdown in Fromville, Boyd had to kill his wife to protect their son.
After the Colony House massacre, he struggles with his leadership role and plans to leave. It’s especially relevant because the season 4 trailer suggests she may continue to haunt him in some form, and if the town keeps using her to do so, it’ll be important to remember the kind of damage still hanging over his head.
Season 2, episode 2
The Kindness of Strangers
Credit: Chris Reardon/MGM+
Boyd encounters a mysterious man who infects him with skin-crawling parasites, while a new but menacing music box entity enters the picture. Season 2 features some of the wildest episodes of the series, and now, they’re even more suspicious. In season 2, episode 1, Julie helps Boyd with the rope, which directly ties the moment to storywalking.
Integrations
Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant
Ports
HDMI, Optical, Ethernet
The theory here is that Julie may appear in the woods again while Boyd is busy stumbling through blurred visions. If he couldn’t clearly see what was out there, chances are that something was already hidden in plain sight.
Season 2, episode 6
Pas de Deux
Credit: MGM+
This episode explores the psychological toll and cryptic clues nestled within the town, featuring pivotal character interactions and acting as a major turning point as we move from fear of the monsters to finding a potential way to fight back.
Boyd discovers the blood worms in his system can be transferred, and after slicing his hand along with the creature Smiley’s throat, then mixing their blood, Smiley dies, proving the night creatures can be killed. If season 4 revisits the fallout from that moment, it’ll be crucial to remember just how major a turning point this really is.
Season 2, episode 8
Forest for the Trees
Credit: MGM+
In the wake of Smiley’s death, residents grapple with a new, real-world nightmare involving a horde of cicadas and music box hallucinations, but there’s something more intriguing about why this episode was chosen to revisit. As the cicadas exit Smiley’s body, they leave room for another theory.
If Julie really can storywalk, what if she did so into that boiler room and opened a door, accidentally helping to unleash the threat? It sounds extreme, I know, but it does make sense given what we now understand about her involvement in past events.
Season 2, episode 10
Once Upon a Time
Credit: MGM+
The key takeaway here has to do with Tabitha’s attempted escape from the town. It actually works, and she awakens back in the real world, where she desperately tries to get someone to listen to her. This act not only propels but enforces the notion that Fromville feeds on hope.
With season 4 teasing something “ancient and dark,” that theme of hope-feeding may become even more important, especially as the series continues its return to suffering, hope, and the strange power the town draws from its victims.
Season 3, episode 2
When We Go
Credit: Jessie Redmond/MGM+
While Tabitha connects with Victor’s father in the real world, back in Fromville, the town mourns another loss, causing intense grief and devastation, particularly for Boyd and Kenny. This episode also introduces us to more clues about Miranda, the Man in Yellow, and the repeated idea that hope means something deeper in this world.
As the series continually suggests, if hope indeed acts like energy, it could directly connect to the children, the roots, and the larger force behind everything in Fromville.
Season 3, episode 4
There and Back Again
Credit: Chris Reardon/MGM+
Tabitha returns to town in an ambulance with Victor’s father, fulfilling a prophecy from a sinister phone call to the Matthews family. Full of intense psychological torment by the night creatures, Fatima shows signs of cannibalism, and Boyd must choose whom to save.
With Randall back under the microscope, his capture by the monsters still raises serious questions, and Julie’s missing memories here also feel important. Is this the writers’ way of planting a delayed reveal like they did with Victor’s fractured memory? Maybe.
Season 3, episode 10
Revelations, Chapter 2
Credit: Chris Reardon/MGM+
Season 3’s finale reveals Julie to be a storywalker while deepening Boyd’s moral collapse, unpacking Jade and Tabitha’s connection to the past, introducing the Man in Yellow in terrifying fashion, and shockingly ending with Jim’s death.
As Victor leads his father to the place where he buried his mother, Eloise experiences the same memory. If season 4 finally pays off where the Eloise mystery is concerned, this particular revisit could prove essential.
From
Release Date
February 20, 2022
Network
Epix, MGM+
Directors
Jack Bender, Brad Turner, Alexandra La Roche, Bruce McDonald, Jeff Renfroe
These episodes may be moments Julie revisits as she learns how to control storywalking. If that happens, scenes will hit much harder, in which case these episodes are warnings. Every little detail matters, and every scene means more than you think. The truth isn’t coming – it’s been there the whole time, proving to viewers it pays not to sleep on subscribing to MGM+.
From season 4 premieres April 19 on MGM+.

