Editor’s Notice: The next incorporates spoilers for Darkish Winds Season 3 Episode 2.The third season of the acclaimed AMC+ thriller Darkish Winds is now streaming and showrunner Graham Roland has delivered a brand new risk that may take Navajo Nation Law enforcement officials Joe Leaphorn (Zahn MClarnon) and Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon) to the brink. Darkish Winds relies on the sequence of novels “Leaphorn & Chee” by Tony Hillerman and boasts government producers Robert Redford and George R.R. Martin (each make shock cameos this season). Within the very first scene of Episode 1, a petrified Leaphorn has an encounter with a terrifying creature in the dead of night desert that units the stage for a possible antagonist in Season 3. It’s later revealed that they might be coping with the traditional and mystical Navajo entity referred to as Ye’iitsoh. The viewers has seen transient glimpses of what could also be Ye’iitsoh, however after two episodes, it’s clear that Roland will slowly roll out what this creature is and is able to throughout Leaphorn and Chee’s investigation.
What Is Ye’iitsoh in ‘Darkish Winds’?
Translated from the Navajo, Ye’iitsoh means “Massive monster” or “Massive God,” and Leaphorn and Chee are advised that this monster is concerned within the disappearance of two younger Navajo boys. Within the Navajo tradition, the Ye’iitsoh is the equal to the Sasquatch, boogeyman, or the La Llorona monster of Hispanic folklore. It’s believed that no monster is extra highly effective or feared within the Navajo nation than the Ye’iitsoh. Because it has been advised and handed down through the years, Ye’iitsoh was a member of the Anaye, a set of evil god-like monsters in Navajo mythology. Its urge for food for consuming people was unmatched because it roamed the plains, slaying and consuming the Diné.
Ye’iitsoh threatened to wipe out the Diné, both by consuming all their meals or the individuals. It’s stated that he put fistfuls of individuals into his jagged, toothy mouth abruptly. The legend additionally goes that he was killed by two courageous twins who have been the sons of the solar service god, Tsohanoai. Comparable variations have them as the dual sons of the solar, Jóhonaaʼéí. The twins have been endowed with the items of lightning bolts and arrows product of sunbeams from their father, which they used to mortally wound Ye’iitsoh and kill him. The primary episode of the season is bookended by references to the Navajo monster, and it is going to be a major storyline transferring ahead.
The Second Episode of ‘Darkish Winds’ Seems to Affirm the Ye’iitsoh
Within the premiere of Darkish Winds‘s third season, each Leaphorn and Chee are skeptical that Ye’iitsoh might be concerned within the abductions, however within the second episode, as Leaphorn investigates additional, he turns into increasingly satisfied that they’re certainly coping with one thing that can’t be simply defined. Leaphorn is tormented by inexplicable visions of what appears like Ye’iitsoh. Within the ultimate scene of Episode 2, Leaphorn is satisfied that that is no bizarre man. His ultimate line conveys that he’s certain that the Ye’iitsoh is concerned as he merely says, “It is him,” and the tip credit roll.
It will likely be attention-grabbing to see how Roland continues to insert this legendary being into the storyline of Season 3. It is a new ingredient for the critically acclaimed present, and the usage of Ye’iitsoh guarantees to be the moodiest and most horrifying drive that Leaphorn, Chee, and Bernadette Manuelito (Jessica Matten), who’s now a Texas Border Patrol officer, have handled. Whereas Season 2 addressed skinwalkers and witchcraft, this bodily manifestation of Ye’iitsoh is way extra visceral and intimidating. It additionally could also be a tool that’s meant to play on Leaphorn’s guilt after he left B.J. Vines (John Diehl) out within the desert to die on the finish of Season 2, and it is a psychological device, displaying that he’s nonetheless emotionally tortured over his actions.
New episodes of Darkish Winds stream Sundays on AMC+ within the U.S.