Critic’s Rating: 4.6 / 5.0
4.6
Truth has a habit of surviving, even when every hand around it tries to bury it. Sugar Season 2 Episode 4 opens with that idea and never lets go.
Although Ji Moon spends much of the hour on the run, the real focus is on the secret he’s carrying rather than the man himself.
Suddenly, Fire Sale feels like an organized operation willing to eliminate anyone who gets too close.


After the previous episode ended with John Sugar discovering Lieutenant Ray Vega’s connection to the hospital footage, I expected another tense cat-and-mouse chase.
But the episode digs into Jesus Jaquez’s death, explains Ji Moon’s fear, and shows Sugar finally staying ahead for once.
At the same time, Colin Farrell never forces the emotion.
He keeps it restrained, letting Sugar’s empathy shape his choices, and that steady resolve hits harder in a world where others lean on violence.
Hospital Flashback Finally Gives Ji Moon’s Fear Real Weight
The cold open immediately reframes nearly everything we have watched throughout the season.


Sugar begins with a solemn reflection:
“There are rules, ways of behavior to help us harmonize with our understandings… But there is one rule. The first rule that never changes...”
The irony surfaces almost immediately, as the episode shows Ray Vega violating that very principle with unnerving composure.
The flashback finally confirms what happened inside St. Anthony City Hospital eight days earlier.
Ji Moon never witnessed an accident, nor did he stumble across an unfortunate coincidence.


He watched Vega calmly remove Jesus Jaquez’s oxygen supply while reciting:
“Peace I leave with you. My peace I give to you… Do not let your hearts be troubled. Don’t be afraid.”
Hearing them while a man deliberately takes another person’s life produces exactly the opposite effect.
The sequence feels profoundly unsettling because Vega displays neither anger nor panic.
The episode also answers one lingering question that has hovered over Ji Moon since Sugar Season 2 Episode 1.


He never caused Jesus’ death, as he became the lone witness unfortunate enough to see it happen.
Vega choosing to photograph Ji Moon instead of killing him opens a whole new set of questions, ones that will likely drive the rest of the season.
Why preserve evidence of the witness if the intention was always to eliminate him later? That decision feels far too deliberate to dismiss.
Charlotte’s Misstep Adds a Welcome Layer of Uncertainty
One aspect I really enjoyed throughout Sugar Season 2 Episode 4 was the way it challenged both Sugar’s judgment and ours.
After reviewing the security footage from his room, Sugar confronts Charlotte, convinced she has orchestrated an elaborate plan to get close to him.


He lays out the sequence almost like a detective presenting evidence in court.
She checked into the hotel, introduced herself, flirted just enough to lower his guard, and then entered his room while he was away.
For a brief moment, I believed he had solved another mystery.
Charlotte, however, refuses to match his intensity. She responds with visible disbelief before bluntly telling him to check the room again because she had left him a note.
“Go check, asshole.”


It is probably the funniest line of the episode, and I think Sugar had it coming.
The hidden note doesn’t clear everything up about Charlotte, but it does show how even great investigators can get trapped by their own assumptions.
Sugar has spent the last several episodes expecting deception around every corner, and that constant vigilance finally leads him toward the wrong conclusion.
I appreciated that the writers allowed him to make a mistake because perfection rarely produces interesting characters.
Sugar earns our trust precisely because he occasionally gets things wrong and has the humility to reconsider rather than stubbornly doubling down.


Even so, I am still not ready to completely trust Charlotte.
Going into someone’s room under the guise of housekeeping still feels odd, and the show keeps her just ambiguous enough to make you question how much she’s hiding.
Ray Vega Quietly Emerges as the Season’s Most Compelling Villain
The confrontation between John Sugar and Lieutenant Ray Vega completely changes the balance of power.
Until now, Vega has existed as an anonymous figure lurking around the edges of the investigation.
Episode 4 removes that anonymity and replaces it with something far more dangerous.


Tony Dalton plays Vega with remarkable restraint.
He never raises his voice unnecessarily, nor does he rely on theatrical intimidation.
His confidence comes from knowing exactly how much control he has over the situation.
Sugar pieces together Vega’s identity through careful observation rather than convenient coincidence.
The hospital footage, Vega’s habit of checking his watch, and his background all come together into a smart, satisfying reveal that trusts the audience to keep up.


Sugar confronts him directly:
“We both saw you murder Jesus Jaquez at the hospital.”
One exchange lingered with me long after the episode ended when Vega tells Sugar:
“You’ve got an angel.”
That single sentence quietly introduces another mystery.
Someone powerful intervened on Sugar’s behalf, and whoever made that phone call possesses enough influence to make Vega reconsider his next move.


The series wisely leaves that thread hanging instead of rushing toward an explanation.
Danny’s Frustration Finally Boils Over
Danny has spent the season worrying about Ji Moon, defending him, searching for him, and making excuses for him.
Episode 4 finally shows the emotional cost of carrying that responsibility for years.
When Sugar learns that Tyler Ko was with Ji Moon and confronts Danny for hiding it, Danny finally snaps.
“What fucking difference does it make?”


That response could have sounded selfish in another series. Here, it feels painfully human.
Sugar refuses to let that frustration become an excuse as he said:
“There is a very dangerous man, and he’s looking for Ji. If he finds your brother first, he will kill him.”
Danny’s heartbreaking reply explains why he has become so emotionally detached.
“He’s killing himself anyway. Fucking let him.”


The argument with Danny also produces the breakthrough Sugar has been waiting for.
As Sugar helps Danny fix his tie, the tension eases just enough for Danny to open up.
He finally admits the man who helped Ji Moon escape the nightclub was Tyler Ko, a name he’d been hiding.
That single revelation changes the investigation almost immediately.
Sugar heads straight to Tyler’s home, and although the latter is nowhere to be found, one brief conversation allows Sugar to connect several scattered pieces of the puzzle.


Suddenly, Hannah’s planned meeting, Vega’s movements, and Ji Moon’s disappearance stop feeling like separate events because they are all leading toward the same destination.
I especially liked how naturally the writers handled this progression. Danny doesn’t suddenly become the hero with all the answers.
He simply decides that trusting Sugar is better than carrying every burden alone, and that small decision ends up saving his brother’s life.
Hannah Walks Straight Into Vega’s Trap While Sugar Finally Gets Ahead of Chase
One of the episode’s smartest decisions involves Hannah.
For a while, it appears as though she has betrayed Ji Moon by arranging the meeting with the police. The truth proves considerably more complicated.


Vega carefully convinces Hannah that helping locate Ji Moon will protect him rather than endanger him.
“You’re doing great so far. Just do the deal like you planned. Give the money, take the drugs, and let him go. We’ll take it from there.”
The wording says everything about Vega’s methods. He manipulates people until they believe they are making the correct decision themselves.
Meanwhile, Sugar pieces together the trap through observation instead of luck.
A mall travel photo reminds him of the one on Danny’s fridge, and that small detail leads him straight to Teddy’s Ranch in the Mojave Desert.


I always appreciate detective stories that reward close attention, and Sugar earns this moment because all the clues were already there for the audience to piece together.
Val also continues proving that she belongs beside Sugar.
She follows Hannah without protest, keeps him updated during the operation, and proves more reliable than expected for someone so new to the story.
By the time Sugar races toward the desert, the episode quietly shifts gears.
Sugar’s Final Gamble Delivers the Episode’s Most Tense Sequence
The ending act shows exactly why John Sugar remains such an engaging detective.


After discovering the tracking device hidden beneath Ji Moon’s car, Sugar immediately understands Vega’s plan.
Following Ji proves far more useful than chasing him, and Vega has no intention of risking a confrontation in the middle of a crowded mall.
With Ji Moon unconscious from the drugs, Tyler understandably wants to drag him into the car and flee.
Sugar quickly realizes they would never outrun Vega’s team across the desert.
Ergo, he sends Tyler into hiding, keeps Ji Moon inside the ranch house, and prepares a desperate plan that depends entirely on timing.


Ji Moon had already taken drugs and was unconscious. Sugar then used medication to make it look like he’d died from an overdose.
When Vega’s men arrived, they checked him briefly and assumed:
“That motherfucker’s dead.”
One line quietly explains the terrifying calculation running through Sugar’s mind.
“After an overdose, you’ve got three minutes for help to arrive… get revived… come back from the dead.”


The scene becomes almost unbearable because Sugar knows exactly how little room for error he has given himself.
Every second Vega spends searching the house brings Ji Moon closer to real death.
Vega and his team enter, find Ji Moon motionless on the couch, and quickly assume the overdose has already killed him.
That assumption becomes Vega’s only meaningful mistake. His confidence prevents him from confirming the death himself.
Only after the vehicles disappear into the distance does Sugar finally emerge from hiding.


Sugar injects the reversal medication, performs chest compressions, repeatedly urges Ji Moon to breathe, and continues fighting long after many people would have accepted defeat.
It was an incredibly risky decision because if the timing had been even slightly off, Ji Moon would have died for real.
That gamble works because Sugar banks on precision, medical know-how, and a clear read on Vega.
Sugar Season 2 Episode 4 Continues Rewarding Patience
We finally learn why Ji Moon is so terrified, uncover Ray Vega’s deeper involvement, and see Fire Sale move closer to the story’s core without giving everything away.
I also like that the series keeps letting John Sugar solve problems through observation, empathy, and patience instead of brute force.


Those traits set him apart from most TV detectives, and Colin Farrell makes those quieter beats just as gripping as the big confrontations.
Tony Dalton also deserves recognition because Vega grows into an intimidating adversary.
He doesn’t rely on long speeches or over-the-top cruelty. His restraint is unsettling enough, and the hospital flashback shows just how dangerous he is when no one’s looking.
Now it’s less about whether Sugar can uncover the truth and more about whether Ji Moon is ready to speak it.
Fire Sale still holds more secrets than answers, and the biggest blow may still be ahead.
So, TV Fanatics, what do you think Fire Sale really is?
Drop your theories in the comments because I have a feeling we’re only beginning to understand how deep this rabbit hole goes.



