For six seasons,Bojack Horsemanhas put in a tremendous amount of work to earn its place as one of the best comedies on television. It's been hilarious, with mile-a-minute visual and verbal gags that require multiple watches to catch in their entirety, but it's also been heartbreaking, with revelations that punch its viewer directly in the gut and an unflinching focus on the emotional horrors of trauma and addiction. Bojackhas leaned on the tropes of traditional comedy and turned on a dime to deliver breathtakingly original episodes like "Fish Out Of Water," "Time's Arrow," and "Free Churro." It fits perfectly into the 21st century cliche of a Good Show about a Bad Man (or Horse) while excoriating the very idea of an antihero — put simply, Bojack Horsemanhas been sublime TV. And now it's over.
When Netflix released the first half of Season 6 in late 2019, Bojackended on a cliffhanger that could have spelled the beginning of the end for Mr. Horseman. Reporters were closing in on the story of his greatest shame, his beloved half-sister Hollyhock was about to discover one of the (other) worst things he'd ever done, and the sprawling web of harm he'd caused was clearer than ever for those who still cared about him. Part 2 of Season 6 picks up in the uneasy silence between a pulled grenade pin and the inevitable explosion, and spends the rest of the season watching the shrapnel land where it will.
The question of what to do with Bojack the character looms large over its final eight episodes. After being so harmfullyhimself for as long as he's lived in Hollywoo, is he to be absolved, redeemed, punished, or some combinations of all three? His self-centered coping mechanisms and privilege have previously shielded him from all three potential consequences, but his time in rehab and attempt to start fresh as an acting teacher at Hollyhock's school have finally given Bojack something to lose.
SEE ALSO:'Bojack Horseman' Season 6 builds to Bojack's final reckoningBojack begins the season there, musing over how to teach his students what acting is. "Acting" he says in voiceover, "is about leaving everything behind and becoming something completely new." It's a charming and perhaps true sentiment from an artistic standpoint, but leaving his past behind isn't what the new and improved Professor Horseman deserves. At the end of the scene, he closes his voiceover by writing his name on the classroom whiteboard and discovers too late that he's accidentally used a Sharpie marker. There's no erasing it, or anything else.
Bojack's past comes for him in a series of strikes that feel both natural and devastating, but Netflix's Bojack Horsemandoesn't revel in watching its protagonist finally feel the pain he's caused others. There is no voyeuristic "that's what you get" when Bojack gets got; every blow is earned. By the time the season is down to its final three episodes, watching him deal with the consequences feels like watching a cocky, amateur wrestler get his ass handed to him by the Undertaker. It hurts, but it's 100% what he signed up for.
Season 6 also closes out the stories of the rest of the cast, thoughtfully interrogating and delivering what they deserve in stories that also feel earned. Diane in particular has a standout episode in Episode 10 "Good Damage," which uses the scribbly drawings last seen in Season 4's "Stupid Piece of Sh*t"to demonstrate her ongoing battle with depression and her own creativity. Princess Carolyn finds her own way to move past Bojack's interference in her life and career and Mr. Peanutbutter has at least one important revelation about his personal and romantic failings.
Bojack Horsemanends as it ran: extremely well and respect towards the unavoidable reality of cause and effect. What happens to its characters is not surprising to anyone who has been paying attention, but the beauty in how the story is told and the knowledge that their choices and actions mattered is more than enough to cement its final episodes as a worthy finale to a truly excellent show. It's not too much, man. It's precisely enough. What more could anyone ask for?
Bojack Horseman's final season is now streaming on Netflix.
(责任编辑:休閑)
Carlos Beltran made a very interesting hair choice
Record warm ocean temperatures killed large parts of the northern and central Great Barrier Reef
Those rumors of an all
Let Kourtney Kardashian teach you how to properly celebrate your baby daddy
We asked linguists if Donald Trump speaks like that on purpose
When Honda revealed its stunning and grandparent-scaring Civic Hatchback Prototype earlier this year
...[详细]Samsung packed 512GB of storage into a drive the size of a stamp
As the world keeps pushing for ever-thinner devices, the hardware industry keeps shrinking parts dow
...[详细]
E ink, the company behind the pigment-based, low-energy monochromatic displays found in many of toda
...[详细]Jarring campaign tackles disability stigma with offensive statements
In early April, thought bubble-shaped signs started popping up around Pennsylvania with offensive st
...[详细]Nancy Pelosi warns colleagues after info hacked
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi warned fellow Democrats on Saturday to change their cellphone num
...[详细]Jarring campaign tackles disability stigma with offensive statements
In early April, thought bubble-shaped signs started popping up around Pennsylvania with offensive st
...[详细]Stephen King and 600 more U.S. authors come out against Trump
Stephen King is the master of horror -- but even he has never experienced anything quite as horrific
...[详细]Here's how Twitter @mentions are changing
Posts on Twitter -- tweets -- are about to undergo their most significant change in a decade. Most o
...[详细]Photos show the Blue Cut fire blazing a path of destruction in California
A fast moving wildfire continued raging near San Bernadino, California, forcing the evacuation of at
...[详细]Microsoft and Facebook to build a high
Facebook and Microsoft on Thursday announced that they are teaming up to build a subsea cable across
...[详细]This company is hiring someone just to drink all day

Amy Schumer hilariously spoofs mobile commercials with intense new sketch
