Tag: The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

  • REVIEW: ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Enters Its Endgame

    REVIEW: ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Enters Its Endgame

    It’s been known for a couple weeks now that The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel will soon be dropping its curtain for the final time. The Emmy Award winning showbiz dramedy now has only a season left to air, and the latest batch of episodes seem to confirm this with more gusto than any network announcement ever could. I mentioned in my first review of the show’s fourth season, which has now completed its run on Amazon Prime, that there were tones of coda in the air. For all the grandiose of the premiere’s “we’re back” energy, there was also a sense of knowing the end was near. The season’s two-part finale, written and performed on par with the best of the series’ episodes, dives headfirst into this whispered promise, transforming it into a call towards the cheap seats. Every storyline is now angled in a single direction, aimed at something fans of the beloved show might have hoped never to see. As of this week, Maisel has entered its endgame.

    Granted, Amy Sherman-Palladino‘s critical darling isn’t going away just yet. There’s still quite a bit of work to be done before Midge Maisel signs off, it’s just that now it’s more obvious than ever where things are headed. Ironically, the thematic thread needled through each of the final two episodes is not how narratives end, but what might come after they conclude. Alex Borstein‘s Susie Myerson, now operating out of her own office, is less dependent on Midge than ever, as the series continues to insist on asking whether she really needs her star client at all. Of course, Susie is still loyal to Midge, the closest thing she has to a real friend, but the comic’s staunch refusal to accept any gig worth playing has forced Myerson to begin looking elsewhere for a payday. And boy oh boy, does she need a payday. Just as Susie starts finding success with a new magic act and another prospective client, the show reminds the audience that the manager still has a few dues to deal with. After a season of surprising growth, viewers should be curious to see if Susie’s newfound independence sends her soaring or if her past mistakes catch up in a nasty way.

    Speaking of surprising growth, Michael Zegen‘s Joel Maisel, whom I’ve scarcely written about, is also finally growing into a life outside of his former indiscretions. Since the show’s first season, which began with Joel cheating on Midge and leaving her in the middle of the night, the character has somehow found a way to shift from irredeemable to genuinely likable. This is due in large part to the way he’s owned up to his flaws, and embraced the penance for his failures. In accepting his strengths, as opposed to combating his weaknesses, he’s come into his own as a protagonist and found a life more suitable to his desires. With a successful business, a new romantic interest, and a baby on the way, Joel is set up to find his happily ever after. Unfortunately, like Susie before him, it might not be as easy as he hopes it will be. Stephanie Hsu‘s Mei Lin seems less than positive about the prospect of marriage, and her supposedly very dangerous family likely won’t be pleased with her pregnancy either.

    Despite this lack of clarity, it’s a moment of tenderness between Mei and Joel that sends the show’s title character reeling into her final stretch. The cold open of this week’s second installment reveals that the ending of the first may have been more serious than it looked. Kevin Pollak‘s Moishe Maisel is rushed to the hospital, and his prognosis is questionable. It’s an excellent bit of staging and camera work that breaks from the traditional Maisel mold, and it installs an ominous feeling of uncertainty in the viewer from the jump. For Midge, it’s an uneasy situation. Moishe is family, and she cares deeply about him, but he’s also representative of her past life with Joel. Both literally and figuratively, the life she’s spent so long forging for herself is attempting to tear her away from the hospital at every turn. It’s a misplaced sense of duty that keeps her there, which she realizes when she instinctively goes to comfort Joel and finds Mei already has him in her arms. Seeing this, she rushes to do at least one set at the club, and ends up stumbling into what could be the rest of her life.

    After improvising a routine in which she vents about her life, Midge discovers that the enigmatic Lenny Bruce, once again played to perfection by Luke Kirby, has been watching the whole time. The relationship between Midge and Lenny has always been, shall we say, sexual in nature. Erotic in a physical sense, but also in a metaphorical one. Lenny is symbolic of the life Midge wants to live, but never feels ready to commit to. He’s tantalizing, and so is the comedy lifestyle. With her parents and Joel, there’s always been something holding her back, but with Mei in the picture and a minor falling out with her mother, Midge finally feels free to go for it. Ultimately, she does, finally doing the do with Lenny (!) and finding herself walking on the stage at Carnegie Hall. The season’s final shot, of Midge staring at the hundreds of empty seats in front of her, only comes after Lenny berates her for refusing to play by the rules of a game she’d like to win. “If you screw this up, it’ll break my [expletive] heart”, he says. It’s certain much of the Maisel fanbase feels the same, and with everything on the line, the next and last season can’t come soon enough.

  • REVIEW: ’The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Explores the Price of Showbiz

    REVIEW: ’The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Explores the Price of Showbiz

    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, the show and the character, have spent the last several years chasing a rather specific dream. Quick-witted, engaging, and full of prospective, the two have sought to break through their respective barriers and achieve a level of renown typically reserved for more customary counterparts. In other words, they’d like to become famous and they’d like to be themselves while they do it. After a season comprised mostly of personal exploration, the latest round of Maisel episodes have finally taken a dive back into the realm of show business. Only this time, things feel a little different.

    Prior to this season, the marvelous misadventures of Rachel Brosnahan’s Midge Maisel and Alex Borstein’s Susie Myerson always seemed rooted in the idea that Midge was meant for stardom. No matter the setback, Maisel remained determined and Susie maintained her staunch belief in Midge as the golden ticket. Then the duo was left sputtering on an airport tarmac, and things started to go a little sideways. While it doesn’t seem like either of the pair have given up working towards their goals, it is starting to appear that their goals may no longer be what they once were. The first half of the show’s fourth season made it very clear that Midge is no longer interested in doing business the traditional way. As their work hiatus comes to a close, and she once again takes the stage at a higher level, one might find themselves questioning if she is still interested in doing business at all.

    Brosnahan’s lead is forced to face this with the return of two major figures from her past. First up, the man behind her most recent downfall demonstrates the dangers of choosing fame over family. Midge and Susie get an unexpected invite to the wedding of Leroy McClain’s Shy Baldwin, and there discover that their one-time friend has abandoned any semblance of his former life. A bathroom face-to-face between Midge and Shy, followed by an attempted back room deal with his agents, reveals the singer was willing to let go of everything he loved in order to grow his career and reap the rewards. Already disgusted by the self-important regality of his wedding and having now seen the sadness in Shy’s life, Midge leaves feeling more pity than regret.

    Next, she must handle her emotions surrounding Jane Lynch’s Sophie Lennon and her recent reinstatement to the spotlight. It’s not lost in Midge, or the viewer at home, that Sophie’s arc is symbolic of Hollywood’s cyclic nature. The same type of person, dealing with the same type of problems, jumping through the same social hoops, only to once again put others down so they may rise to the top. Midge hates Sophie for all of these reasons, but she is part of the game she’s decided to play, and therefore accepts an invitation to work for Lennon on her new television show. This goes about as well as expected. Meanwhile, Midge’s self-produced show at the strip club is thriving. The comic’s methods of madness are working wonders for the business, so much so that it’s newfound attention begins to nerve the men who use it as a front. 

    The quandary all this unearths is one that’s been at the heart of the series since it began. What does Midge’s future really hold if she can draw a crowd but can’t work with Hollywood? With any luck, this is something the show aims to answer in the final season and a half. The hope, however, should be that Midge is on a path to unprecedented greatness. It’s easy to look at the combination of unexpected run-ins and decide that they’ll drive Midge away from what she loves to do, but Midge has never been one for determent. Instead, it’s possible this brilliant one-two punch from the writer’s room is only serving to teach Midge what she shouldn’t do along the way to her accomplishments. Perhaps one day the Marvelous Mrs. Maisel will get to be one hundred percent herself on the big stage, with both friends and family still at her side.

  • REVIEW: ’The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Proves Timing is Everything

    REVIEW: ’The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Proves Timing is Everything

    Ever since its first, Emmy-award-winning episode dropped in March of 2017, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel has thrived on timing. As has been mentioned on numerous occasions, the show moves at a speed that can only be described as “really fast.” Scenes transition like they’re stuck on LaGuardia’s moving walkway and characters speak at a tempo that could spin a windmill. It’s everything a high school drama director tells their students they should strive for, landing beat after beat in a tight, functioning hour. This exquisite meter is the series’ trademark, and its greatest secret weapon, as the writers seem to remember something the rest of us may have forgotten. In Maisel’s latest batch of episodes, Amy Sherman-Palladino reminds everyone that timing is sometimes most effective when slowed down.


    Everything is Bellmore”, the first of this week’s two new installments, is the show’s official tribute to Brian Tarantina. The actor, known for playing lovable Gaslight emcee Jackie, passed away unexpectedly in 2019. While Tarantina was undoubtedly a cornerstone for the series, one of those little unsung pieces that make the whole thing tick, it never felt like a surefire bet he’d get an entire episode made in his honor. One may have expected a line inserted quickly into an early-season episode, commenting on his absence with a little dedication card appearing after the credits. What one may not have expected was for the writers to take his death and turn it into one of the most poignant moments in Maisel’s entire run.

    Bellmore is a showcase for Alex Borstein, who steps up to deliver an unforgettable bit of acting during the episode’s climactic minutes. A lot of shows have a lot of scenes, where performers stand up to produce tears and spit out dramatic monologues, it’s simply par for the course. However, very few manage to achieve the raw authenticity that Borstein displays during her big moment. While the leads of Maisel may be wealthy Upper West Siders, the series always has truly been about the little guys. Jackie, and by extension Tarantina himself, was one of the little guys. As Susie points out, the man was a hard worker and lived a life full of immense ups and staggering downs. Like any person, he was simply out there trying his best. And yet, it never seemed good enough. No matter how hard he worked, or how many minor successes he had pulled off, his life still ended in a dirty, cramped, one-room apartment. Why? Because, as Maisel has always made apparent, timing is everything.

    Rachel Brosnahan, while magnificent as usual, has taken a back seat to her supporting cast, but it is still her storyline that thematically threads everything together. Now working at a strip club, the resolute protagonist makes it her mission in life to take an otherwise discount presentation and get it off the ground. Though production value does increase, at the end of the day, it’s still a strip club. Try as she might, Midge isn’t yet able to achieve the sort of fulfillment that she desires. Whether or not the club itself is part of the problem remains to be seen, but in the end it boils down to the commentary Bellmont and its follow-up “Interesting People on Christopher Street” are trying to make. Life is short, and sometimes the timing just doesn’t work out. Whether it’s whatever boat Jackie missed, Midge’s dependence on low-rent venues for creative freedom, or Susie’s refusal to do anything about her romantic life until she gets her business afloat, the idea of timing is ever looming.

    The other character who shoulders this theme, and who gets a little extra spotlight this week, is Tony Shalhoub‘s Abe Weissman. A personal favorite member of the cast, as his comedic timing is consistently top-notch, the former Monk star navigates two separate b-plots with sublime expertise. In both, Abe deals with the consequences of not knowing when he should and shouldn’t open his mouth. He publishes a devastating review of a play written by a family friend, resulting in the social exile of the Weissman couple from their community. His frets about the romantic history between his wife and best friend get Jason Alexander‘s Asher and himself in trouble with the federal government. It’s a lesson in balancing truth with timing, done with the mix of comedy and dramatics that only Maisel can pull off.

    Ultimately, this week’s duo of episodes is dedicated to the element that helps the show stand out in more ways than one. Pacing, music, production design, costumes, and everything in between are up to their usual snuff. From a filmmaking standpoint, the show only continues to prove the importance of timing. Only now, the story is starting to as well. Just remember, even if Midge is able to get the technical aspects of that strip to show up and ticking, she still finds a way to fall in the pit at the end.

  • Amazon To End Emmy Award-Winning Show With Fifth Season

    Amazon To End Emmy Award-Winning Show With Fifth Season

    It would seem that The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel will soon take her final bow. Amazon revealed today that the Emmy Award-winning series has been renewed for a fifth season, but it will be the last for showrunner Amy Sherman-Palladino and her talented cast. Luckily for fans, they won’t have to wait long for the final season to air, as it was also announced that filming for the surprise fifth series is already underway in New York City. The news comes ahead of the fourth season’s premiere, which is set to debut on Prime on February 18th with two new episodes.

    Amazon Studios boss Jennifer Salke had the following to say about the show’s ending:

    The dozens of awards cement Maisel’s legacy in many ways, but what’s even more enduring and poignant are the characters Amy created and the joyous, brilliant, singular world she and Dan brought to life. This series has meant so much to Prime Video and the effects of its success will be felt long after its final season. I can’t wait for fans and our worldwide Prime Video audience to savor each moment as we embark on the culmination of this groundbreaking and unforgettable series.

    Maisel’s end shouldn’t be too much of a shock for viewers. Sherman-Palladino spoke about the future of her show during the height of the Coronavirus pandemic and hinted that the break-in production had led her and her team to rethink how long the series should truly last. While it may be sad news for longtime fans, it could be good fortune for the show to end on its own accord. Perhaps this means the writers will be able to conduct a proper ending, without ever jumping the shark.

    Source: Deadline

  • REVIEW: ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Is Back and More Anxious Than Ever

    REVIEW: ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Is Back and More Anxious Than Ever

    It feels like a lifetime since we last saw Rachel Brosnahan step on stage and grab a mic as the exuberant, crowd-pleasing Mrs. Midge Maisel. A lot has happened in the real world since 2019’s excellent third season aired, and fans of the show are no longer who they once were. Where there was once cool determination towards fast-paced success, there is now loads of anxiety surrounding an uncertain future. Many post-pandemic projects have tackled this newfound era of global turmoil with on-the-nose allegories, while others have chosen to ignore it completely and embrace the concept of escapism. The first two episodes of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel‘s latest outing have taken a more subtle approach, opting to reflect the current state of affairs with a fresh tone that puts Midge and Alex Borstein‘s Susie Myerson on a new path of personal apprehension.

    To be clear, it does this exceptionally well. It helps that the shift in the titular character’s mood is an organic offshoot of where we last saw her, having been kicked off a life-changing tour and left to mope on the airport tarmac. A moment like this leaves a lot of doors open, and what the writers choose for the character next becomes a defining moment in the show’s story. In the season’s first episode, Rumble on the Wonder Wheel, it’s a mental break not unlike what many viewers have likely experienced in the past few years. It’s self-doubt and self-sabotage meant to rationalize the blow of life falling apart and slipping out of one’s own control. Charmingly, it’s also how someone who really wants something can crawl out of their own gutter to go and get it. The season’s second episode, Billy Jones and the Orgy Lamps, is a wonderful flip side of the coin. Despite the darkness of everything our heroes must face, viewers are treated to the glimmer of light that comes from no longer caring to play the game. This batch of episodes sees Midge, and Susie, in rare form, and sets them up for a journey that promises a confrontation with questions they’ve never been asked before.

    Though the show may be venturing into unfamiliar emotional territory, its other signature hijinks remain gleefully intact. In particular, the pacing of each episode continues to be some of the best tempo work on television. Even in the slower, more dramatic moments, every comment made, sound created, and move taken fits together like a well-choreographed dance number. The natural chemistry of the show’s cast oozes out of every conversation, with dialogue rattled out at speeds that would make theater kids blush. It’s joyous watching sets brought to life by a machine that’s so well oiled, with steadily reliable tracking shots and visual color coordination that make it hard not to be engaged. If anyone thought Amy Sherman-Palladino‘s energetic production would lose steam heading into its fourth season, they should be pleased to find it’s more alive than ever.

    This is due, in large part, to the supporting cast. While Midge and Susie face demons, the rest of the gang bring the show back to the upbeat comedy that made audiences love it in the first place. There’s a great bit at the end of the season’s first episode that puts the series and it’s characters on the same level of blissful, beautiful, unaware chaos as It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. These are people with massive personalities, and much of the best humor comes from when innocent civilians are thrown in their way. In this scene and many others, Tony Shalhoub and Kevin Pollak remain the series’ underrated MVPs. Timing is everything in the world of Maisel, and these two have it in spades. Every line is delivered with neurotic perfection, bouncing off whoever shares the screen like a basketball on a concrete court. Michael Zegen is perhaps more likable than ever as Joel Maisel, who seems to be on the latter end of his redemption arc. The B-plot revolving around his new life as a club owner in New York’s Chinatown is surprisingly interesting, and more welcome than the show’s previous forays into his rollercoaster personal life. Along with Shalhoub‘s math teacher-to-art critic character journey, the series appears to be shaping into it’s final form as a story about people realizing what they’re truly passionate about.

    Speaking of final form, Season Four, so far, feels very much like the beginning of the end for this beloved series. While it’s possible it goes on for a little while longer, the essence of Rumble and Billy Jones is that the overarching story is starting to figure out where it’s going. From the very first, striking shot of the season’s open, it feels as though The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel may be headed toward her final act. Luckily, there’s still some ground to cover, and this new set of episodic installments promises to bring a whole lot of laughs, and maybe a few more tears before it’s all over.