Here’s a review of P-Valley Season 2, Episode 4 (“Demethrius”) as if viewed on Blu-ray, focusing on the episode’s content and the format’s technical merits. Format Reviewed: Blu-ray (1080p, DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1) Episode Grade: ★★★★½ (4.5/5) Blu-ray Technical Grade: ★★★★☆ (4/5) Episode Breakdown: “Demethrius” – The Calm Before The Storm If Season 2 of P-Valley has been a slow-burn tension wire, Episode 4, “Demethrius,” is where that wire starts to hum. Directed with a claustrophobic intimacy by Barbara Brown, this episode is deceptively quiet—but don’t mistake stillness for peace. The title refers to the dead husband of troubled dancer Miss Mississippi (Shamika Cotton), whose ghost (literal and figurative) hangs over The Pynk like a shroud.
The Blu-ray includes a 7-minute featurette, “Behind the Strobe: Demethrius” , with Cotton and Annan discussing domestic violence portrayals. There’s also a deleted scene of Hailey (Elarica Johnson) at a storage unit—interesting but inessential. Missing: commentary track or a music breakdown. Final Verdict “Demethrius” is a haunting, dialogue-driven pivot that trusts its actors to carry the weight. On Blu-ray, the episode gains a tactile, cinematic weight that streaming compression (even 4K) can’t match—especially in audio. If you’re collecting P-Valley for the visual and sonic richness, this disc is worth it. Just be prepared for an emotional gut punch, not a party. p-valley s02e04 bluray
You’re only here for the pole work and club anthems—Episode 5 picks that back up. Here’s a review of P-Valley Season 2, Episode
The DTS-HD MA 5.1 track is where this episode shines. The sound design is immersive: distant highway traffic outside the club, the creak of a floorboard in a tense silence, and the way the bass from the club’s speakers bleeds into the hallway. Dialogue is crystal clear in the center channel—critical for Keyshawn’s hushed confession. The LFE channel gets a workout during the brief, jarring flashback sequences. The title refers to the dead husband of
The episode belongs to Shannon Thornton’s Keyshawn (Miss Mississippi). We finally get the full, devastating context of her abusive marriage to Derrick. A single, unbroken close-up of her in the dressing room, recounting the night Demethrius died, is some of the finest acting on premium cable this year. On Blu-ray, the subtle tremors in her jaw and the deadness behind her eyes are painfully vivid. Meanwhile, Uncle Clifford (Nicco Annan) delivers a monologue about memory and survival that could win an Emmy on its own.