In the seventh episode of Evil’s third season, titled the series dives into a hallucinatory exploration of how faith, brainwashing, and supernatural dread collide. This episode is often cited by fans as a standout for its balance of high-stakes tension and the show's signature bizarre humor. The Core Mystery: Possession or Deprogramming?
The plot centers on , a young man who was abducted from a peaceful-seeming new age commune by his parents and a cult deprogrammer named Dr. Paul. Owen is held against his will in a seedy hotel, showing classic signs of demonic possession—including a sharp-tongued (and oddly flatulent) demon that enjoys mocking priests' Latin grammar. The team—Kristen, David, and Ben—is brought in to determine if Owen is actually possessed or if he is a victim of the violent psychological deprogramming he is being subjected to. Key Character Arcs & Twists Watch Evil S03E07 The Demon of Cults 720p AMZN ...
The larger season arc tightens as David is pressured by the clandestine Vatican group, The Entity , to plant a bugged toy owl in the Bouchard home to spy on Kristen’s daughter, Lexis. David’s refusal to betray his friend marks a pivotal moment in his character's moral journey. In the seventh episode of Evil’s third season,
"The Demon of Cults" is praised for its "allure of cults" theme—showing how modern cults can look like normal religions filled with loving, smiling people while hiding dark rituals beneath the surface. It subverts tropes by having the "exorcism" resolved not through religious ritual, but through a simple act of human connection when Owen's girlfriend, Lily, is allowed to reach out to him. Evil Season 3 Understands the Allure of Cults | Den of Geek The plot centers on , a young man
Skeptic Ben Shakir finds himself in a "Secret Science Club" that turns out to be a cult led by a woman named Renee , who claims to channel Jesus. In one of the show's most visceral sequences, Ben is nearly sacrificed in a ritual, only to be found later by his teammates standing in a field, drenched in goat blood, and dryly explaining the carnage with a single word: "Religion".