Sex Education - Season 1- Episode 4 -

This directly contrasts with the show’s usual sex-positive chaos. While Otis is trying to fix "broken" penises and vaginas, Maeve is dealing with the actual consequences of sex: biology, finance, and choice. It is a sobering counterpoint that elevates the entire series. Perhaps the most painful thread is the drift between Otis and Eric (Ncuti Gatwa). Eric, recovering from his homophobic attack in Episode 3, is desperate to reclaim his flamboyant identity. Otis, consumed by the clinic and his crush on Maeve, becomes a neglectful friend.

The argument in Eric’s bedroom is brutal. "You’ve become boring, Otis," Eric spits, accusing his best friend of using the clinic to cosplay as his sex therapist father. Gatwa’s delivery is sharp enough to draw blood. It forces the viewer to ask: Is Otis helping people, or is he just avoiding his own loneliness? The episode suggests the latter. The clinic is a distraction from the fact that Otis can’t yet masturbate without panic, let alone love someone. Director Ben Taylor employs a claustrophobic framing in Episode 4. The school hallways feel narrower; the therapy sessions are shot in shallow focus, trapping the characters against blurred backgrounds. When Adam finally confesses his anxiety, the camera holds on a two-shot of Otis and Adam—two boys who hate their fathers for different reasons—sharing a silence that feels more honest than any dialogue. Sex Education - Season 1- Episode 4

The feature beat of the episode is the : Adam Groff (Connor Swindells) reluctantly arrives for a session with Otis. Adam, the bully who has terrorized the school, is revealed not as a monster, but as a boy drowning in performance anxiety. The scene is a masterclass in tonal control. Swindells plays Adam with a terrifying vulnerability—a bulldog who has forgotten how to whimper. Otis, stammering through his advice about "the pressure to perform," accidentally stumbles into the truth: Adam isn’t afraid of sex; he’s afraid of intimacy. This directly contrasts with the show’s usual sex-positive