Amber’s fantasy is to have her actual life be as perfect as it appears on social media. Roarke presents a guest with an envelope that reveals the date of his death.

The Stepford Wives meets The Social Dilemma, Fantasy Island edition: if it looks too good to be true – especially if it’s on social media – it probably is too good to be true.

We have a mother this episode, who is doing her utmost to present her family to the world as picture-perfect, but predictably, there’s ill feeling bubbling not very far under the surface.

The more she tries to force this, the more twisted and robotic their actions seem – until they’re all sucked into some sort of dystopian maze while she uncovers the real issue… her traumatic childhood. It turns out that she was projecting her image of perfection onto her children rather than letting them find their own bliss.

Predictable and formulaic, yes. Even more so than usual. Slightly confusing in places, also yes. That’s not the worst of it, though. As we see the aftermath of Elena and Javier’s break-up, the more narratively contrived it seems, and all it’s done is to alienate the audience from Helene. I appreciate her wanting to bond with her father, but I’m over her.

Verdict: If you love your children, let them go… and in Helene’s case that ought to be permanently. 6/10

Claire Smith