Review‘s Grand Finale is the Indelible End of a Tragicomic Masterwork
Image via Comedy Central
It is as we feared: Thursday night’s episode of Review, Comedy Central’s most singular series, was its last, and if you haven’t seen it, you should stop reading immediately. (Here’s a courtesy buffer sentence.) Life reviewer Forrest MacNeil (Andy Daly) loses everything he loves in Review’s grand finale, and we are left just as bereft by the sudden departure of this show. It was outstanding from beginning to end, an indelible work of dark comedy that deserves to go down in TV history. As Forrest puts it, it was “television’s only show.”
“Cryogenics / Lightning / Last Review”—the title of which tipped Comedy Central’s hand as to their plans for the show’s end, despite Daly and company’s commendable (and overwhelmingly successful) efforts to subvert viewer expectations throughout Review’s abbreviated final season—is an episode of television I will not soon forget. I have never seen a network comedy series cram this much brilliantly twisted humor, legitimately gripping suspense and absolute emotional devastation into 30 minutes, and likely never will again.
It comes down to this: Forrest has the chance to reclaim everything he ever held dear—his wife, his son, his home, love itself—and he throws it all away. He sacrifices himself at the altar of his show. He chooses Review.
This was inevitable—Forrest’s all-consuming dedication to his show has defined him from the series’ very start. But to see him offered a golden opportunity to redeem himself and willfully squander it is an emotional gut punch, one that hurts even more if you allowed yourself to hope it wouldn’t happen. “It had to be done, because I was put on the earth to do this,” Forrest declares after vetoing “Not Reviewing Anything Ever Again.” His love of his work conquers all.
That obsession is what propels him through two truly harrowing reviews to begin the episode. “Cryogenics,” as previewed earlier this week, finds even the fanatical Forrest hesitating, horrified by the “alarming enormity of this request.” A.J. (Megan Stevenson) urges him to reject it, like she rejected “Slapping A Stranger’s Ass,” reminding him once more that he has a choice. But while that would be true of any normal person, it isn’t true of Forrest. “I do whatever is asked of me, no matter what that is,” he reminds A.J. in turn. It’s his fatal flaw, the Achilles heel that turns this comedy show into a classical tragedy.
If the episode had ended after “Cryogenics,” all would have been well. Forrest writes final letters to his wife and son, then travels to Freeze At Last, a skin-rejuvenating cryotherapy clinic, foolishly believing he is about to be encased in ice for hundreds of years. When he is released, he is earnestly “astounded to be alive,” marvelling at all the futuristic technology around him—his reaction to a hands-free scooter (which I refuse to call a “hoverboard”) is especially priceless—before it occurs to him that his beloved family has surely died in the interim. In a moment of broken clock clarity that is all too fleeting, Forrest laments his “tragic mistake,” and once he realizes that his family is actually alive and well, and knocks on Suzanne’s (Jessica St. Clair) door, he has an epiphany—the epiphany he has needed to have since season one, episode one.
“There is nothing that I could possibly have shared with the world about being frozen that would have been worth never seeing the two of you again,” he tells her. “Nothing.” It’s an incredibly sweet moment, even after a second viewing. Suzanne has suffered for far too long at her insane husband’s hands, and it’s beautiful to see her reaction to this flicker of the man she married, as if it were the first ray of the rising sun spilling out over the horizon. She hints that, if Forrest can extricate himself from Review, all will be as it was.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- movies The 50 Best Movies on Hulu Right Now (September 2025) By Paste Staff September 12, 2025 | 5:50am
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-