
Paradise Season 3: Thomas Doherty Promises Definitive Answers on Dylan’s Parentage and the Mystery of ALEX
Dylan’s True Identity: The Burning Question Heading Into Paradise Season 3
As Paradise gears up for its much-anticipated third and final season, one question dominates fan speculation: Is Dylan, also known as Link, truly the son of Samantha ‘Sinatra’ Redmond? Thomas Doherty, who portrays the enigmatic Dylan, has ignited excitement among viewers by confirming that the new episodes will finally provide a clear answer to this complex mystery.
Clues and Theories: How the Show Has Teased Dylan’s Parentage
Season 2 delivered a cascade of revelations, the most significant being Dylan’s real name and birthday — details that strikingly match Sinatra’s son, who was believed to have died years earlier. With the same name, birthday, and current age, the links between Dylan and the lost child are impossible to ignore. Sinatra herself becomes convinced that Dylan might be her son, a belief fueled by the quantum AI known as ALEX.
Yet, the finale masterfully avoids a definitive reveal. Doherty, in a recent interview, emphasized, ‘He knows that it’s feasible. Is it true? We don’t know yet. We’re going to find that out, definitely, in Season 3.’ This tantalizing non-answer has only deepened the anticipation among fans and theorists alike.
Why ALEX Matters: Sci-Fi Tech, Anomalies, and Possible Timelines
At the heart of the parentage enigma is ALEX, the mysterious AI that has already blurred the lines between life, death, and reality. The show hints that ALEX may possess abilities reaching beyond the conventional, possibly allowing for time manipulation, multiverse access, or reality-bending science fiction scenarios. It’s suggested within the narrative that Dylan’s anomalous existence could be a byproduct of ALEX’s unexplored capabilities — and Sinatra is convinced her son’s fate is “one of the anomalies connected to ALEX.”
Technical aficionados will appreciate the layers here: Dylan appears in multiple flashbacks before a cataclysmic supervolcano event and was responsible for constructing an early iteration of ALEX. These scenes don’t just provide backstory — they further cloud the boundaries of time and identity that ALEX has the power to manipulate.
The Human Factor: Grief, Fatherhood, and Emotional Stakes
Even amidst the wildest science fiction concepts, creator Dan Fogelman and the cast keep the story grounded in raw, human emotion. Season 2 ended with Dylan reeling from the death of Annie, the shocking discovery of his daughter, and the overwhelming possibility that Sinatra is his mother. Doherty has confirmed that his character’s journey in Season 3 is set to unravel painfully and personally as he wrestles with fatherhood, mourning, and the inheritance of familial secrets. These multi-generational threads are expected to be woven through the show’s signature mix of suspense and sentimentality.
Returning Faces and the Road Ahead
The final season has locked in its primary cast, ensuring that the key players — including Xavier Collins (Sterling K. Brown), Teri Rogers-Collins (Enuka Okuma), Presley Collins (Aliyah Mastin), James Collins (Percy Daggs IV), Dr. Gabriela Torabi (Sarah Shahi), Agent Nicole Robinson (Krys Marshall), and Jeremy Bradford (Charlie Evans) — will be back. Given the show’s inventive narrative structure, the return of deceased characters like Sinatra and President Cal Bradford (James Marsden) through flashbacks or ALEX-induced visions also remains on the table.
Paradise’s engagement with quantum AI, time loops, and family trauma sets it apart in today’s crowded landscape of sci-fi dramas. As the final season’s production gets underway, viewers are braced for answers not only about Dylan, but about the far-reaching consequences of ALEX — and, ultimately, whether lost family can truly be restored or are simply rewritten in the memories of those left behind.
Where to Catch Up and What’s Next
With all episodes of Paradise seasons 1 and 2 now streaming on Hulu, now is the time for fans and newcomers to dive into its intricate web of mystery, technological speculation, and raw human drama. Prepare for a resolution that promises to redefine what viewers thought they knew about identity, technology, and the bonds that survive even the collapse of civilization.



