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Then came the first major twist. On November 13, 2016, HBO aired “Trompe L’Oeil”, the seventh episode of Westworld Season 1. In its final moments, viewers learned that Bernard Lowe, the park’s head of programming (played by Jeffrey Wright), wasn’t human at all, but a host, built by Dr. Robert Ford (Anthony Hopkins) in the image of Ford’s late partner, Arnold. The twist shocked viewers, generated even more buzz for the series, and cut straight to the heart of the theme. Nearly a decade later, fans still haven’t recovered.
On November 13, 2016, Westworld Pulls Off a Major Twist

Created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, the series featured a sprawling cast, led by Evan Rachel Wood, Thandiwe Newton, Ed Harris, and James Marsden, who played hosts and humans locked in cycles of violence and rebellion. By the time “Trompe L’Oeil” came out, audiences had already gone full conspiracy wall. Bernard’s lack of backstory triggered Reddit threads speculating on his past. His conversations with Ford about the “nature of consciousness” spurred wild theories, most of which never came close to what the writers had in mind.
In episode 7, when Theresa Cullen (Sidse Babett Knudsen), Bernard’s colleague and paramour, discovers Ford’s hidden lab, she uncovers host blueprints and sees Bernard’s own face staring back at her. Bernard then hits her with the “doesn’t look like anything to me” line before Ford commands Bernard to kill her. Beyond the emotional devastation, the twist forced viewers to confront Westworld’s central question about the line between “real” and “artificial.” Bernard was programmed to believe he was “real,” so was he? Bernard’s slow processing of the nature of his own consciousness is distilled best in his line from the following episode, “I understand what I’m made of, how I’m coded, but I do not understand the things that I feel. Are they real, the things I experienced? My wife? The loss of my son?”









