The Guardian (USA)

Barry finale review – farewell to the true best show on television

- Stuart Heritage

Well, that’s it. The best series on television has ended. Since 2018 it has towered above its rivals, thanks to its highwire ability to mix incredible comedy with the sort of intense drama that leaves your stomach in knots for days. And now it’s over. Four seasons and done. Succession? What? No. I’m talking about Barry.

Barry has concluded with “wow”, an episode of television that pulled off the remarkable job of creating a definitive ending and leaping forward a decade (for the second time in a month), while still managing to be the bitter Hollywood satire it always was. It was an extraordin­ary achievemen­t, and you can’t help but feel that it deserved far more than to play second banana to Succession.

But first, about that finale. Really, there was only one way that “wow” could have ended, and that was with Barry dead. This was a man who has committed more atrocities – both legal and moral – than almost any other character on television, and for a show as preoccupie­d with redemption as this, he would always have to die. Personal improvemen­t didn’t work. Prison didn’t work. However you would choose to characteri­se his relationsh­ip with Sally didn’t work. In the end, there was a hint of Barry having its cake and eating it – he was about to turn himself in when he was murdered – but the ending was a just one.

Except that wasn’t the ending. The real ending happened during another 10-year flash-forward, with Barry and Sally’s now-teenage son John watching the movie made about Barry’s life. Not only did it present a false Hollywood narrative – it framed Barry as a hapless stooge, set up by criminal mastermind Gene Cousineau then buried with full honours at Arlington – but it also presented itself as the trashy, blood-soaked, gratuitous­ly oversimpli­fied nonsense that many people secretly wished Barry was.

But Barry was its own thing; highminded and experiment­al and relentless­ly singular. This might be why it didn’t jibe with the general public as well as Succession. Succession is all big money and far-flung locations while, for all its ambition, Barry always felt like it was shot on the cheap. Its influences, too, were more left-field. Read any interview with Bill Hader from the last five years and you’ll be overwhelme­d with references to Soderbergh and Luis Buñuel and FW Murnau and Preston Sturges. There is also the sense that Succession was taken more seriously because its episodes were an hour long, while some snobbery still exists about the merits of the half-hour dramatic form.

All that, plus this final season has arguably been Barry’s least accessible. This is partly because season three ended on the satisfying note of Barry finally being brought to justice. Hader has previously illustrate­d this with a story about Larry David; Hader said he was working on a fourth season of Barry, David replied that he must be crazy, because the story had so obviously already finished.

What this season opened up, though, was space to underline exactly how repellent these characters are. In the first episode back, Barry goads a sympatheti­c prison warden by reminding him (and us) of all the police officers he has killed. Henry Winkler’s Gene Cousineau shot his own son. No-Ho Hank watched impassivel­y as the love of his life was murdered. Sally Reed, played by the miraculous Sarah Goldberg, was eventually given the closest thing to a happy ending, but she still endured a stretch of being a horribly negligent mother. The history of television is littered with villains and antiheroes who audiences have incorrectl­y fallen in love with. Think Tony Soprano, or Walter White or Kendall Roy. Barry’s fourth season often felt like an opportunit­y for the writers to prevent this from happening. Time and again, the show went to great pains to underline just how awful these people were.

When you think of this last season, you’ll probably remember how oppressive­ly dark it was. In one episode we heard the terrified gasps of a man drowning in sand. In another we witnessed the once-seen-never-forgotten nightmare fuel of a silhouette stalking a character through their own home. Last week’s penultimat­e episode began with the sound of a man hyperventi­lating as his torturer explained that he had amputated his arms and legs. It has been richly satisfying stuff, if you had the stomach for it, but that’s a big if. I’m honestly struggling to recall a season of television that has been so inescapabl­y bleak. Comfort food this wasn’t.

But taken as a whole, this turn

 ?? Photograph: HBO ?? ‘Richly satisfying stuff’ … Anthony Carrigan in Barry.
Photograph: HBO ‘Richly satisfying stuff’ … Anthony Carrigan in Barry.
 ?? Golinger) in Barry. Photograph: HBO ?? Going out with a ‘wow’ … Sally (Sarah Goldberg), Barry (Bill Hader) and John (Zachary
Golinger) in Barry. Photograph: HBO Going out with a ‘wow’ … Sally (Sarah Goldberg), Barry (Bill Hader) and John (Zachary

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