Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 2 review: Manhattan’s least likely crime-busting trio returns in style

- By Nina Metz

Back for a second season — and a second crime to solve — the success of Hulu’s cozy-funny-mournful whodunit “Only Murders in the Building” rests primarily on the shoulders of its three leads, and their blend of ruminative youth (Selena Gomez) and questionab­le life experience (Martin Short and Steve Martin) comes together once again to unravel yet another mystery.

But the draw this time out, for me at least, is the rich storyline of a side character named Bunny Folger. A cranky old soand-so with white hair and big round glasses, she is the most hated person in the Arconia, the glorious abode where they all reside on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. She is also the latest murder in the building.

The discovery of Bunny’s death-by-knitting needle was the cliffhange­r that closed out Season 1, putting the crime-busting trio of Mabel (Gomez), Oliver (Short) and Charles (Martin) in the crosshairs of the police — and in the crosshairs of the real killer, for that matter. Season 2 picks up in the aftermath, when our amateur sleuths become persons of interest. After a brief interrogat­ion, they exit the police station to a phalanx of media. “Oh my God!,” Mabel and Charles say, appalled. “Oh my God!,” Oliver says, thrilled.

And so it’s back to the Arconia, where they ramp up their true crime podcast for a new season. As possible suspects, they’re also the subjects of a competing podcast, the “Serial”-esque show with the insufferab­ly smug host (Tina Fey) who goes full muckraker: “Oliver Putnam, the derelict theater director who almost killed 12 people with his last Broadway outing, has a long paper trail of Bunny hatred over the years,” she intones. “Tune in weekly as our investigat­ion unfolds in real time.”

The pop culture satire extends to Charles’ old cop show, the one that once made him famous (and now a has-been) which is being rebooted. The catch: He’s been relegated to a supporting player. But at least there are actual writers on the job this time, “not just some executive producer high on cocaine screaming dialogue into a tape recorder.” (Mabel may get fewer opportunit­ies for humor, but Gomez makes them count with a wonderfull­y deadpan way of delivering a line.)

An aspiration­al real estate fantasia — those massive apartments with all that wonderful wallpaper! — “Only Murders in the Building” mashes up high comedy and carefully observed human moments and Season 2 is a continuati­on, and deepening, of that. All three leads are aces at this, and the show is directed with a particular appreciati­on for Short’s symphony of facial expression­s.

But the heart of this new season is the ecosystem of the building itself — and Bunny is at the center of that. (The actual building the Arconia is based on, called the Belnord, has its own strange and fascinatin­g history.)

Bunny’s not just a plot device or an easy target for jokes, but a person with her own story, told in flashback in Episode 3 titled: “The Last Day of Bunny Folger.” She may be crabby but she’s also vulnerable. And pretty great, actually. She’s the kind of person who scolds the doorman and then tells him she hopes his wife’s knee feels better. The granddaugh­ter of the Arconia’s architect, she’s probably its longest resident, which means she knows all about the building’s secret elevators and back passageway­s. A true creature of New York, she may not be nice but she’s kind — a distinctio­n with a difference. It’s such a brilliant performanc­e from Tony-winner Jayne Houdyshell, and it’s one I found unexpected­ly moving.

After her death, her elderly mother Leonora arrives to take possession of a valuable painting hanging in Bunny’s bedroom, but it’s gone missing. The painting is described as “porny” in subject matter and of course Oliver is curious for more details: “Are we thinking full frontal? Bondage? Penetrata?” As it happens, the painting features none other than Charles’ father. How this informatio­n plays into the mystery of Bunny’s murder is a thread left dangling for much of the 10-episode season, which is as Byzantine in plot as those inner passageway­s that wind through the building itself.

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