Euphoria Season 1 - Episode 3 [ COMPLETE ◆ ]

The episode doesn’t condone or condemn her. Instead, it presents Kat’s arc as a question. Is this empowerment? She is making money, calling the shots, and wielding sexual dominance. Or is this a 15-year-old girl dissociating from her trauma by turning her body into a commodity? Levinson shoots her scenes with the same neon-lit gloss as the rest of the show, refusing to moralize. But there is a sadness underneath. Kat is not doing this because she wants to; she is doing it because the boys at school made her feel worthless, and revenge feels better than therapy. Director of Photography Marcell Rév deserves special mention for Episode 3. While Euphoria is known for its saturated, hallucinatory look, “Made You Look” leans heavily into surveillance aesthetics . The camera often feels like a hidden security camera, watching Nate from behind a fridge handle or observing Rue through a car window. This creates a sense of voyeuristic guilt in the viewer. We are intruders.

The episode follows them on a date. They steal clothes from a mall, break into a stranger’s pool, and finally sleep together for the first time. The scene is shot with reverence and soft focus—a stark contrast to the harsh, strobe-lit brutality of the show’s sex scenes involving Nate and Maddy. For a moment, you believe Rue might be okay. Jules looks at her like she’s the moon. Euphoria Season 1 - Episode 3

However, controversy followed. Some parents’ groups called the episode “child exploitation.” The Reply All podcast debated whether the show was responsible for glamorizing the very behaviors it claimed to critique. But defenders argued that discomfort was the point. You are supposed to feel sick when Maddy cries during sex. You are supposed to feel terrified when Rue opens that pill bottle. The episode doesn’t condone or condemn her

In the years since, Episode 3 has been cited as a template for modern prestige teen drama. Shows like Genera+ion and Grand Army owe a debt to its raw, unblinking eye. But none have replicated its specific alchemy of art direction, music, and psychological realism. “Made You Look” is the bridge between the introduction of Euphoria and its descent into chaos. By the end of the episode, there is no going back. Rue has relapsed. Nate has fully committed to his reign of terror. Maddy is trapped. Kat is diving deeper into sex work. Jules, the only character who seemed to have a moral compass, is lying to the girl who loves her. She is making money, calling the shots, and

Sam Levinson once said in an interview that Euphoria is “about the things you can’t take back.” Episode 3 is a museum of those moments. It is an hour of television that dares you to look away, knowing you won’t. Because behind the glitter, the bruises, and the blue hair dye, you see yourself in these broken children. And that is the most terrifying trick of all.

In a scene that is pure Hitchcockian dread, Nate has dinner with Maddy and her parents. The small talk is excruciating. Maddy’s mother admires how polite Nate is. Nate smiles, perfectly. The camera holds on his eyes—dead, calculating. He is performing masculinity as a sociopath learns it: by mimicry.

What starts as a joke—wearing a corset and a cat mask for an audience of strangers—becomes something darker. Kat realizes that men will pay to be humiliated by her. She discovers that her weight, the source of her high school insecurity, is a fetish to others. She leans into it with a cold, calculating fury.