ELITE EPISODES OF 2020
Schitt's Creek, This Is Us and more make the list
Despite production delays caused by the pandemic, there was still plenty of television to watch this year. Good television. Bad television. Emily in Paris.
Rest assured, only the former is on this list of the year's best TV episodes.
EGO DEATH
I MAY DESTROY YOU
The finale of Michaela Coel's stunning HBO series, which draws on her own experience as a survivor of sexual assault, will stay with you long after the credits have rolled. As Arabella (Coel) recalls previously elusive details from the night she was attacked, she attempts to take control of her narrative — literally, for a book about her experience.
FAGAN
THE CROWN
Much of the buzz around season 4 of The Crown concerns the show's treatment of Prince Charles's marriage to Princess Diana (amid an entanglement with Camilla Parker Bowles) but this episode revolves around the unnerving moment in 1982 when an unemployed house painter named Michael Fagan broke into Buckingham Palace. As depicted in The Crown, Fagan (Tom Brooke) spent several minutes talking to the Queen in her bedroom. The episode, which features standout performances by Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth and Gillian Anderson as Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, uses one of England's most bizarre true-crime stories to explore the era's growing opposition to Thatcher's policies.
EPISODE 10 NORMAL PEOPLE
TV creators are increasingly attuned to the importance of approaching mental health storylines with sensitivity and consideration for vulnerable viewers. Hulu's excellent adaptation of Sally Rooney's bestselling novel offers a master class, balancing its central focus on Marianne and Connell's evolving relationship with a thoughtful storyline that finds Connell (Paul Mescal) seeking help after a childhood friend dies by suicide. The instalment was praised for normalizing therapy — especially given the stigmas that can prevent men from seeking mental health treatment — and for showing that recovery is possible.
THE VIEW FROM
HALFWAY DOWN BOJACK HORSEMAN
Netflix's animated comedy, about a washed-up '90s sitcom actor with comeback dreams who happens to be a horse, ended its six-season run this year. In the penultimate episode, the show's rich universe jumps dimensions yet again as Bojack (in an obscure state of consciousness) reunites with several of his dead family members and friends — including his reproving mother, Beatrice, and his Horsin' Around co-star, Sarah Lynn.
Like the show itself, The View From Halfway Down is vivid and whimsical and also a little sad. It would have made for a daring, if divisive, finale, but as it stands it's a great lead-in to the show's final bow.
HAPPY ENDING SCHITT'S CREEK
We couldn't imagine a happier ending for Eugene and Daniel Levy's delightful sitcom. In the show's series finale, David (Daniel Levy) gets married with his mother Moira (Catherine O'hara), father Johnny (Eugene Levy) and sister Alexis (Annie Murphy) by his side. There's a time and place for fan service and this was it: David's wedding features a sweet callback to a fan-favourite musical moment from season 4 and Moira officiating in a Pope-inspired look. There was closure all around, with some Roses leaving Schitt's Creek for new adventures and other members of the family staying in the town that brought them closer together.
PART 1 1 1 UNORTHODOX
The best opener of the year goes to Netflix's absorbing series, adapted from Deborah Feldman's 2012 memoir about leaving the Hasidic community in which she grew up. Part 1 follows Esther Esty Shapiro (Shira Haas) as she enters an arranged marriage at 19, and struggles to navigate the strict rules of her new life. At an impasse with her husband and her intrusive in-laws, Esty flees Brooklyn for Berlin in a desperate and thrilling declaration of freedom. Haas is captivating as Esty, a role that required the Israeli actress to learn Yiddish.
MIDDLE GAME
THE QUEEN'S GAMBIT
The Queen's Gambit, adapted from Walter Tevis's 1983 novel of the same name, builds to a gripping finale that would be on this list if not for the Netflix show's enthralling fourth episode. Middle Game follows chess prodigy Beth Harmon (Anya Taylor-joy) as she heads to an esteemed tournament in Mexico City with her adoptive mother, Alma (Marielle Heller) by her side. The episode marks a crucial point for Beth's chess career but the heart of the episode is Beth and Alma's growing bond.
FATHER' S DAY BETTER THINGS
Few shows explore motherhood like Pamela Adlon's acclaimed FX series. This fourth-season episode encapsulates the show's raw and intimate treatment of the subject as Sam (Adlon) and several of her single girlfriends spend Father's Day reflecting on what led to their divorces. (Tellingly, most of the children are upstairs.) After cocktails, the women gather around a fire pit and bare their complex emotions, giving each other the compassion they've often failed to give themselves.
FORTY
THIS IS US
This Is Us's fall première saw the Pearsons processing the pandemic and protests over racial injustice. Randall (Sterling K. Brown) commanded the episode as he reflected on his childhood in a white family that talked very little about race despite having adopted a Black son. A present-day conversation with his sister Kate (Chrissy Metz) further captured the complexities of our current discourse, and the burden Black people often bear when it comes to calling out racial disparities.