9/10 Best moment: Sofia’s whispered “I’m not crazy. I’m just no longer pretending.” x265 recommendation: Essential. Do not watch this episode via streaming compression. Seek the HEVC release.
Note to viewers: This analysis references the high-efficiency x265 (HEVC) encode of The Penguin S01E03. The choice of x265 is particularly relevant here, as the episode’s pervasive darkness, neon-drenched rain, and intricate shadow work benefit from superior macroblock handling and bitrate preservation compared to older x264 encodes. The result is a cleaner gradation in Gotham’s perpetual twilight—no banding in the skyline, no crushing in Falcone’s black leather. Episode Title: “Bliss” Runtime: 58 minutes (uncut, as intended) Director: Craig Zobel Writer: Noelle Valdivia I. The Cold Open: A Funeral for a Kingdom The episode wastes no time. We open not with Oz Cobb (Colin Farrell, buried under prosthetics but radiating pure id), but with the aftermath of Alberto Falcone’s murder. The x265 encode handles the rain-slicked cemetery with unnerving clarity: each droplet on a mourner’s umbrella, the way light bleeds through fog, the subtle tremble in Sofia Falcone’s (Cristin Milioti) gloved hands.
In a masterfully shot sequence (thank the x265’s color accuracy for the sickly green glow of the mushroom labs), Oz negotiates with the Triads. He doesn’t offer money. He offers —trucking lanes, corrupted weigh stations, toll booth bribes. The scene is claustrophobic, lit by a single fluorescent tube. The x265 encode retains film grain without introducing artifacts, making the sweat on Farrell’s brow feel tactile. the penguin s01e03 x265
Oz wins by reversing into a warehouse, baiting his pursuers into a collapsing floor. It’s not heroism. It’s cockroach cunning. The episode’s final five minutes are its most devastating. Oz returns to his mother’s apartment—a cramped, lovingly detailed space filled with religious icons and faded wallpaper. The x265’s high dynamic range makes the candlelight feel warm against the cold blue of Oz’s rain-soaked coat.
The x265 encode shines during the rainstorm that engulfs the chase. Each impact sends cascades of water across the windshield; each turn sprays muddy runoff. Because x265 allocates bits to motion rather than static backgrounds, the truck’s grinding gears and the Continental’s screeching tires remain artifact-free. There’s no digital smearing. You feel every pothole. 9/10 Best moment: Sofia’s whispered “I’m not crazy
This is a wake soaked in suspicion. Oz stands in the back, a predator playing sheep. The episode’s thesis is delivered silently: in the Falcone power vacuum, loyalty is the first casualty. The x265’s deep contrast ratio makes the black suits look like moving voids—appropriate for men about to become ghosts. The episode’s title refers to a new psychedelic compound flooding Gotham’s streets—a fungal-based euphoric that also suppresses fear. Oz sees it not as a narcotic, but as a logistics opportunity . Where previous episodes established his ambition, Episode 3 reveals his operational genius.
Sofia’s arc in Episode 3 is about shedding performance. She admits to a murdered informant (in a chilling monologue) that she enjoyed killing. Milioti delivers this with a smile that doesn’t reach her eyes. The episode’s sound mix—perfectly synced in this release—layers dripping water over her confession, as if Arkham itself is applauding. Forget The Batman ’s Batmobile roar. Episode 3 gives us a 1970s Lincoln Continental versus a stolen garbage truck through the narrows of the East End. Choreographed by second unit director Darrin Prescott ( John Wick ), the sequence is brutal, low-speed, and terrifying. Seek the HEVC release
Without spoiling the twist: Oz’s mother (Deirdre O’Connell, devastating) reveals she knows exactly what he is. The dialogue crackles: “You’re not a king, Oswald. You’re a janitor. You clean up other men’s messes and pretend the mop is a scepter.”