The second season of Hijack has never been content to play it safe, and its finale, the eighth and final episode titled Terminal, is no exception. After a slow-burning opening stretch that tested the patience of even the most devoted viewers, the season found its footing in the back half and roared toward a conclusion that delivered genuine suspense without overstaying its welcome.
At the centre of it all is Sam, played with effortless cool by Idris Elba. He and his unlikely ally Otto have managed to stabilise the situation aboard the train, and as the episode opens, a fragile sense of control seems within reach. That feeling does not last long. It rarely does in this world.
Sam receives word through Clara that his partner Marsha is still not safe. The message is enough to harden his resolve. He commits fully to seeing the plan through, even as the ground shifts beneath him.
Hijack and the man behind the curtain
What becomes clear early in the finale is that Lang is not the architect of this crisis. He has been taking direction from Stuart, a figure operating from behind prison walls using a concealed phone. Stuart’s motivations have nothing to do with freeing anyone. His goal is to eliminate both Bailey-Brown and Sam, cutting off threads that could unravel something much larger.
Lang is assigned the task of getting Bailey-Brown onto the train and finishing the job. To do this, he covers up the murder of a German agent, fabricating a disappearance story to buy himself time and freedom of movement. It works, at least temporarily. But the cover begins to crack when Peter Faber discovers the body and pieces together that Lang is the inside man. The information reaches the right people at exactly the right moment.
Survival in the woods
Running parallel to the train’s final approach is Marsha’s desperate bid to stay alive. She is being hunted through the woods by two determined pursuers who know the consequences of losing her. She manages to evade them but cannot break cover without risking everything.
Her solution is instinctive and effective. She doubles back to a nearby cabin and builds a large fire, using the smoke and flames to signal a search helicopter circling overhead. The gamble pays off. Rescue arrives before her hunters can close in, and Marsha is pulled to safety. Whether that safety changes the calculus for Sam is another matter entirely.
The finale’s final push
When Sam brings the train to the rendezvous point, he releases the hostages and sends Otto out to lead them away. Otto, wrestling with guilt over his role in the plot, initially follows orders before turning back. He cannot abandon Sam, and that decision proves decisive.
He restarts the train and drives it back into the tunnel with Lang still aboard, correctly calculating that Lang has no interest in dying underground. Sam makes his move as the train lurches to a stop. Lang escapes and detonates the train, apparently believing the job is done.
His call to Stuart to confirm the outcome is intercepted by Daniel, who finally has the evidence needed to expose Stuart as the mastermind. But Lang has miscalculated. Sam and Otto both made it off the train, and Sam follows Lang out into the open city.
The chase ends when authorities surround them both. Lang, unwilling to be taken alive, chooses death over surrender. The crisis is over. The hostages survive. Sam and Marsha are reunited.
Hijack season 2 may have taken its time getting started, but it earned its ending. Whether Sam’s story continues remains an open and genuinely compelling question.
Hijack is streaming now on Apple TV.

