Whilst I never thought that it got anywhere near the top tiers of television options, I generally enjoyed the first season of "Locke And Key" and though I thought the second season was a step down, I was happy to carry on with this third run, particularly when Netflix confirmed it would be the closing chapter. I felt the quality and my interest level, continued to decline here.
With Dodge seemingly despatched for good, the Locke's take the time to take stock of their situation. Tyler (Connor Jessop) is well down the road to forgetting about the magical keys and heads away from Key House to try and recover. Unbeknownst to them, another demon has passed through the Omega door and Gideon (Kevin Durand) has and even more horrific plan for the keys than Dodge did.
It's only four days since I finished this third season and I'm already struggling to remember much about what actually happened in this run. Looking back on it, all I can recall is the same scene played out in a myriad of different ways. Gideon would threaten to kill someone unless the Locke's gave him they keys, they would go off to do it and then everyone would escape somehow before reconvening back at the house. By the way, I get that he couldn't take the key directly from a Locke, but he didn't seem to have any trouble picking up ones they'd dropped, so why didn't he just kill them all and then tear the house to pieces until he found them all. Admittedly, he'd never have found the one in Gordie Shaw's head, but he didn't know that was an option going in. Also, there's a character in this called Gordie Shaw, which will make any British person watching the show laugh every time he comes up.
Ultimately, I ended up not really caring what happened as a show that once appeared to have endless possibilities petered out in a fairly tedious run of chase scenes, patchy performances and logical stumbling blocks.