Highlights
- Homelander’s arrival in the finale of Gen V was a shocking climax that left the season on a jaw-dropping cliffhanger.
- The final scene of Barry, where John watches The Mask Collector, is an unexpected and fitting end that satirizes the film industry.
- Donna crashing her car into the house in The Bear’s Christmas episode was a tense moment, and Jamie Lee Curtis stole the show with her anxiety-inducing performance.
From Bill and Frank’s heartbreaking final dinner in The Last of Us to the captivating Christmas flashback in The Bear, 2023 has brought a ton of unforgettable TV moments. With the first seasons of great new shows like Gen V and Ahsoka and the final seasons of already beloved shows like Barry and Succession, 2023 has been a great year for television. There have been plenty of great TV moments this year, like a certain death that took place surprisingly early in Succession’s swansong season.
Homelander Arrives (Gen V)
Season # |
1 |
Episode # |
8 |
Episode Title |
Guardians of Godolkin |
Director |
Sanaa Hamri |
Writer |
Brant Englestein |
Cast |
Jaz Sinclair, Chance Perdomo, Lizze Broadway, Maddie Phillips |
Homelander’s appearance in the Gen V season 1 finale was much more than just a cheap cameo. The sociopathic supe’s arrival on the campus of Godolkin University provided the finale episode with a shocking climax that left the season on a jaw-dropping cliffhanger. There was another fan-pleasing appearance by a character from The Boys in Gen V’s mid-credits scene. Upon discovering the wreckage of “The Woods,” Billy Butcher drops one of his signature C-bombs and brands Vought to be “a bunch of c***s.” As great as Butcher’s appearance was, it wasn’t quite as mind-blowing as Homelander’s scene. He attacks our hero, Marie Moreau, with an eye-blast. She’s captured but, miraculously, she survives Homelander’s attack. This sets up a thrilling supe rivalry for Gen V season 2 (or possibly The Boys season 4 if it’s going to cross over with the spin-off).
John Watches The Mask Collector (Barry)
Season # |
4 |
Episode # |
8 |
Episode Title |
wow |
Director |
Bill Hader |
Writer |
Bill Hader |
Cast |
Bill Hader, Stephen Root, Sarah Goldberg, Anthony Carrigan |
The series finale of Bill Hader’s brilliant dark comedy Barry was full of unexpected moments, like Fuches having a change of heart and throwing himself on Barry’s son John to protect him from gunfire, or Gene Cousineau succumbing to his dark side and shooting Barry dead. But the greatest moment in the episode is its final scene, in which a now-teenage John watches The Mask Collector, a biopic about the dad he never really got to know. The movie is absurdly falsified, presenting Barry as a clear-cut hero and Gene as a criminal mastermind. This was a wholly unexpected but fitting way to end the series. It tied back to the show’s original premise of satirizing the film industry and reframing stories to warp the truth, and it acted as a meta commentary on what some audiences hoped Barry itself would be (and points out everything wrong with those conventional, cliché-ridden action thrillers).
Donna Crashes The Christmas Party (The Bear)
Season # |
2 |
Episode # |
6 |
Episode Title |
Fishes |
Director |
Christopher Storer |
Writer |
Joanna Calo & Christopher Storer |
Cast |
Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ayo Edebiri, Lionel Boyce |
The Bear’s holiday-themed season 2 episode “Fishes” is a surprisingly star-studded episode that builds tension masterfully to the shocking climactic moment of Donna crashing her car into the house. The Christmas flashback featured appearances by such A-list guest stars as Bob Odenkirk, Sarah Paulson, Jon Bernthal, Gillian Jacobs, and John Mulaney. But Jamie Lee Curtis stole the show from all of them with her anxiety-inducing turn as Donna, the erratic Berzatto matriarch. Curtis’ scene-stealing turn as Donna, culminating in that climactic car crash, went a long way towards explaining why Carmy and his family struggle to express themselves in a mature and non-volatile way – it’s how they were raised.
Bill & Frank’s Last Dinner (The Last Of Us)
Season # |
1 |
Episode # |
3 |
Episode Title |
Long, Long Time |
Director |
Peter Hoar |
Writer |
Craig Mazin |
Cast |
Pedro Pascal, Bella Ramsey, Nick Offerman, Murray Bartlett |
In just its third episode, HBO’s adaptation of The Last of Us pivoted away from its central dynamic of Joel and Ellie to tell the standalone love story of Bill and Frank. Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett played the romance perfectly, and captured audiences’ hearts around the world. This episode was full of memorable moments, from the performance of “Long, Long Time” that leads to the couple’s first kiss to Bill’s gleeful giggling in the strawberry scene, but those moments all built up to the tragic finale. Bill and Frank’s final dinner, in which Bill reluctantly assists with Frank’s suicide before taking his own life, marked an appropriately heartbreaking conclusion to the show’s most touching episode.
The Death Of Logan Roy (Succession)
Season # |
4 |
Episode # |
3 |
Episode Title |
Connor’s Wedding |
Director |
Mark Mylod |
Writer |
Jesse Armstrong |
Cast |
Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook |
Just three episodes into its final season, Succession delivered the moment the series had been building towards from the very beginning: the death of Logan Roy. This series was all about which of Logan’s kids would take over his media empire after his death, but this episode focused more on the immediate tragedy than who would assume his position as CEO of Waystar RoyCo. Sneaking Logan’s death into an episode called “Connor’s Wedding” was a genius move, and it took audiences by surprise so early in the season. The fallout of Logan’s demise is one of the most realistic depictions of death and sudden loss ever put on-screen. Mark Mylod’s long-take direction gave the whole agonizing sequence a documentary-like sense of realism. Jeremy Strong, Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook, and Alan Ruck all nailed the raw emotions of their characters’ very different, very in-character reactions to the news of Logan’s death.