Close Menu
Voxa News

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    ‘Send them to Mars’: Led By Donkeys Glastonbury exhibit takes aim at Musk | Glastonbury 2025

    June 26, 2025

    Acne Studios Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

    June 26, 2025

    Weight loss jabs study begins after reports of pancreas issues

    June 26, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Voxa News
    Trending
    • ‘Send them to Mars’: Led By Donkeys Glastonbury exhibit takes aim at Musk | Glastonbury 2025
    • Acne Studios Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
    • Weight loss jabs study begins after reports of pancreas issues
    • Liverpool sign Milos Kerkez as spending reaches £170m
    • Mbappé files harassment complaint against PSG
    • China’s Xiaomi undercuts Tesla with yet another cheaper car
    • ‘Amazing for blind people’: app helps cricket fan find way around Lord’s | Blindness and visual impairment
    • BBC website in US launches paid subscription service
    Thursday, June 26
    • Home
    • Business
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • World
    • Entertainment
    • Technology
    Voxa News
    Home»Entertainment»The Bear season four review – finally becoming the show it was always destined to be | The Bear
    Entertainment

    The Bear season four review – finally becoming the show it was always destined to be | The Bear

    By Olivia CarterJune 26, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    The Bear season four review – finally becoming the show it was always destined to be | The Bear
    One of the family? … Ayo Edebiri as Sydney. Photograph: FX
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Recalibrate your palate: The Bear is not the show it used to be. The relentless drama you were stunned by in season two – when you finished an episode and said it was the best show you had ever seen, then played the next one and said it again – is not coming back.

    Season four starts with Uncle Jimmy (Oliver Platt), the family friend who has invested in the fledgling Chicago eaterie The Bear, installing a countdown clock that says the business has 1,440 hours to save itself. But much of the new run isn’t even about the restaurant. The show is outgrowing its premise, leaving behind “yes, chef!”, lingering closeups of seared beef and screaming matches in the pantry in favour of a different intensity, one that draws even more deeply on the characters and how they fit together. Indulge it – and you will have to indulge it, in a few ways – and you will find this experience just as rich.

    The restaurant is reeling from negative press – the Chicago Tribune’s reviewer reports understatedly that they observed “dissonance” – but the show returns seeming almost arrogantly relaxed. The first two episodes potter, enjoying extended montages of folk cooking to the artfully curated sounds of the Who, Talk Talk, the Pretenders and, in a preparing-for-service sequence that goes on for longer than you think it would dare, a brilliantly deployed excerpt from Tangerine Dream’s soundtrack for the 1981 movie Thief.

    Trying to do better … Jeremy Allen White as Carmy. Photograph: FX

    Between courses, characters set out their self-improvement goals: Tina (Liza Colón-Zayas) wants to train herself to cook a pasta dish in under three minutes; Cousin Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) wishes the little speeches he gives the waiting staff were more inspiring; Ebraheim (Edwin Lee Gibson) would like to help pull the numbers out of the red by becoming a commercial visionary.

    Dealing with the big stuff as usual are the head chef, Carmy Berzatto (Jeremy Allen White), and his faithful, frustrated assistant, Sydney (Ayo Edebiri). He wants to “do better”: communicate more, apologise more, explain more, shout less. She continues to wonder if she should jump ship to take a job at a flash new startup. A whole episode, co-written by Edebiri and Lionel Boyce (who plays Marcus), is given over to Syd visiting her cousin’s house to have her hair done and discuss the dilemma with her cousin’s young daughter. It’s a lovely digression, but is it necessary?

    Well, yes. It may not feel like it during this year’s slow start, just as it didn’t during that apparently directionless third season, but Christopher Storer, the showrunner, knows what he is doing. More than ever, this is a show about family – the traumas they inflict on each other and the power they have to soothe them – and how families extend to friends and colleagues who can be just as beloved and just as maddening. That Richie is not actually Carmy’s cousin and Uncle Jimmy is not anyone’s uncle has always been an endearing quirk of the setup, but now it becomes essential and endlessly moving. Where once The Bear made pulses pound, now it lets the happy tears flow; the second half of the season is like one long therapy session. Syd isn’t just deciding whether or not to take a job – she is deciding whether or not she is becoming a Berzatto.

    Once again, the centrepiece is a double-length episode dedicated to a family get-together. The whole gang is there, so that unbelievable extended cast – including Sarah Paulson, Bob Odenkirk and John Mulaney, plus new additions Josh Hartnett and a hilarious Brie Larson – is reunited, this time for the wedding of Richie’s ex-wife, Tiff (Gillian Jacobs).

    Squad goals … Edwin Lee Gibson as Ebraheim and Liza Colón-Zayas as Tina. Photograph: FX

    With the unstable Berzatto matriarch, Donna (Jamie Lee Curtis), in attendance, passive-aggressively transferring her anxieties to whoever she is speaking to, the potential is there for another psychodrama along the lines of that sublime but gruelling Christmas flashback from a couple of seasons ago. But having put his creations and his audience through hell, Storer now lets the light in via a torrent of tenderly written, fiercely performed interactions where broken people who love each other start to heal, saying variations on those two beautiful phrases, “sorry” and “thank you”.

    Payoffs big and small ping in every scene as narrative seeds carefully sown – including in that bad third season! – burst into bloom and these people we have come to adore are rewarded. Not that it’s ever easy: if the wedding episode is a classic, so is the painfully fraught, stunningly acted finale, where we don’t know whether the most troubled of our cousins will find the courage to open up. Storer has shown a lot of courage in giving them the chance. This new Bear is doing much better.

    The Bear is on Disney+ in the UK and Australia and on Hulu in the US

    Bear destined finally review Season show
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Olivia Carter
    • Website

    Olivia Carter is a staff writer at Verda Post, covering human interest stories, lifestyle features, and community news. Her storytelling captures the voices and issues that shape everyday life.

    Related Posts

    ‘Send them to Mars’: Led By Donkeys Glastonbury exhibit takes aim at Musk | Glastonbury 2025

    June 26, 2025

    BBC website in US launches paid subscription service

    June 26, 2025

    The F-Word Is Officially Boring (Thanks Trump)

    June 26, 2025

    How AI Short Decisive Moment Aims to Be Mission: Impossible for News

    June 26, 2025

    All the right moves: the London premiere of Gala de Danza – in pictures

    June 26, 2025

    Glastonbury 2025 opening ceremony kicks off festival with a bang

    June 26, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Top Posts

    UK government borrowing is second highest for May on record; retail sales slide – business live | Business

    June 20, 20252 Views

    Inside the No Space for Bezos movement: ‘One man rents a city for three days? That’s obscene’ | Jeff Bezos

    June 25, 20251 Views

    Prosus bets on India to produce a $100 billion company, CEO says

    June 23, 20251 Views
    Don't Miss

    ‘Send them to Mars’: Led By Donkeys Glastonbury exhibit takes aim at Musk | Glastonbury 2025

    June 26, 2025

    In the psychedelic south-east corner of the Glastonbury festival site a rocket has been built…

    Acne Studios Spring 2026 Menswear Collection

    June 26, 2025

    Weight loss jabs study begins after reports of pancreas issues

    June 26, 2025

    Liverpool sign Milos Kerkez as spending reaches £170m

    June 26, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Most Popular

    UK government borrowing is second highest for May on record; retail sales slide – business live | Business

    June 20, 20252 Views

    Inside the No Space for Bezos movement: ‘One man rents a city for three days? That’s obscene’ | Jeff Bezos

    June 25, 20251 Views

    Prosus bets on India to produce a $100 billion company, CEO says

    June 23, 20251 Views
    Our Picks

    36 Hours on the Outer Banks, N.C.: Things to Do and See

    June 19, 2025

    A local’s guide to the best eats in Turin | Turin holidays

    June 19, 2025

    Have bans and fees curbed shoreline litter?

    June 19, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • ‘Send them to Mars’: Led By Donkeys Glastonbury exhibit takes aim at Musk | Glastonbury 2025
    • Acne Studios Spring 2026 Menswear Collection
    • Weight loss jabs study begins after reports of pancreas issues
    • Liverpool sign Milos Kerkez as spending reaches £170m
    • Mbappé files harassment complaint against PSG
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    2025 Voxa News. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.