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Braciole (The Bear)

"Braciole" is the eighth episode and first season finale of the American television comedy-drama The Bear. The episode was written by series creator Christopher Storer and executive producer Joanna Calo, and directed by Storer. It was released on Hulu on June 23, 2022, along with the rest of the season.[1]

"Braciole"
The Bear episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 8
Directed byChristopher Storer
Written by
  • Christopher Storer
  • Joanna Calo
Produced byTyson Bidner
Featured music"Let Down" by Radiohead
Cinematography byAndrew Wehde
Editing byJoanna Naugle
Original release dateJune 23, 2022 (2022-06-23)
Running time48 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Review"
Next →
"Beef"
List of episodes

The series follows Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto, an award-winning New York City chef de cuisine, who returns to his hometown of Chicago to run his late brother Michael's failing Italian beef sandwich shop. In the episode, Carmy faces his past, while trying to repair the situation with the restaurant.

The episode received acclaim from critics, with Jeremy Allen White's performance receiving universal praise - particularly for a 7-minute monologue delivered early in the episode.

Plot edit

Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) is haunted by the recurring voice of Michael (Jon Bernthal). He attends an Al-Anon meeting, where he finally opens up about his past. He explains how he and Michael shared an interest in food and planned on opening a restaurant. He was unaware of Michael's drug use, and their relationship dwindled, eventually causing Michael to not allow him to work at The Beef. This inspired Carmy to pursue cuisine in other restaurants. Upon inheriting The Beef after Michael's death, Carmy considers that he is fixing the restaurant in order to fix his relationship with Michael. He claims it is everything to him, but wonders if it means anything to Michael.

Marcus (Lionel Boyce) meets with Syd (Ayo Edebiri) at her apartment, where he eats one of her meals. Their conversation soon turns into their new journeys, with both having quit The Beef. At The Beef, Carmy informs everyone that the restaurant will be closed that night due to a bachelor party for Cicero's friends. As Carmy and Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) talk outside, a fight breaks out during the party. Richie tries to control the situation by assaulting one of the men who are fighting, but after Richie punches him, the man loses consciousness and is admitted to a hospital intensive care unit. Richie is arrested with the possibility of a manslaughter charge if the victim does not survive. The man wakes up, and Richie is charged with aggravated assault. He is released when Carmy bails him out.

Marcus returns to The Beef. Carmy apologizes for his behavior, which Marcus accepts. When Carmy starts a fire on the stove, he zones out, and the others have to put the fire out. Carmy decides to contact Syd, apologizing for his behavior. Richie talks with him, giving him a letter from Michael addressed to Carmy that was found wedged behind the employee lockers. On one side of the letter, Michael wrote, "I love you dude. Let it rip," a phrase Carmy previously shared that Michael had used to encourage Carmy. On the opposite side of the letter is a family meal spaghetti recipe, which indicates that they should use smaller cans of tomatoes because they taste better (apparently finally solving the mystery of why Michael was ordering small cans rather than big ones, which Carmy had been wondering). Carmy retrieves one and starts cooking, until he notices a bag in the tomatoes. The bag contains money, so Carmy and the crew retrieve more cans, all of which contain money as well. Syd returns and agrees to come back to work. Carmy announces the closure of The Beef, intending to open a new restaurant, The Bear. He then joins the crew to dine, envisioning Michael smiling back at him.

Production edit

Development edit

In May 2022, Hulu confirmed that the eighth episode of the season would be written by series creator Christopher Storer and executive producer Joanna Calo, and directed by Storer. This was Storer's fourth writing credit, Calo's second writing credit, and Storer's fifth directing credit.[2] The title is based on the dish of the same name, but The Wall Street Journal offered a different interpretation of the title, "The word braciole, by the way, translates from Italian as 'chops.' Does Carmy have the chops to lead and turn around the family restaurant? Does he have what it takes to move past his brother's tragic death?"[3]

Writing edit

Regarding the final scene, Storer explained, "In terms of the restaurant changing, it's not that they're going to lose all the charm of the restaurant. We're going to deal with this in season two. It's more like: How can we do this and maybe make some money? And maybe make it easier? And maybe — maybe — start from a place that's not fucked? Instead of beating a dead horse and making this fuckin' food that no one even wants to make, I see the promise in my sort of found family in the kitchen. Can we use that to build something freshly, now that we've all found each other in this stupid-ass system where things make no sense and people are putting veal stock on the top fuckin' shelf of the walk-in?"[4]

The opening sequence was originally different. While it would still involve Carmy in a cooking show, he would actually be accompanied by a female celebrity chef. Carmy would confuse her for his mother and then hug her while sobbing. However, the celebrity chef was confused about the scene and decided to drop out of the series, forcing the writers to re-write the scene.[5]

Filming edit

Carmy's seven-minute monologue was filmed on the last day of shooting for the season. White rehearsed the monologue at his apartment, even feeling that he performed better at that point than in the final cut. He explained, "Chris has had this character in his mind for like ten years, and I knew how important that moment was to understand Carmy, understand the story, and to make sense of the stuff that was going on. I felt a lot of pressure."[5] Storer said, "In this scene, I think there's a sense of discovery; that all of his accolades and his quest to become this highly skilled individual were perhaps for the wrong reasons. And that all culminates with an anger pointed at his older brother; that real sense of feeling unloved or forgotten by a family member."[6]

Critical reviews edit

 
Jeremy Allen White's performance in the episode received universal acclaim from critics.

"Braciole" received acclaim from critics. Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote, "On the one hand, this happy ending — and setup for a second season — feels pretty jury-rigged. Why was Michael hiding the money in the tomato cans? Won't Carmy just have to pay back his uncle rather than invest all this cash turning Beef into Bear? And yet that family meal feels like exactly what Carmy, Sydney, the rest of the chefs, and those of us in the audience needed. The brief glimpse of Michael looking over his shoulder and smiling, as if he can somehow witness what he left behind for Carmy and the others, couldn't be lovelier."[7]

Marah Eakin of Vulture gave the episode a perfect 5 star out of 5 rating and wrote, "Folks, Jeremy Allen White is a good actor. He's been lighting up every episode of The Bear as Carmy, the tortured genius chef with all manner of problems, but in 'Braciole,' the season-one finale, he comes in so hot with an Al-Anon monologue that I'd be shocked (shocked, I say!) if I didn't see it on every awards reel submitted to every TV voter next year."[8] Liz Kocan of Decider wrote, "In the last moments of the season, Carmy puts a sign in the window notifying customers that The Beef is closing, and in its place will stand a new venture, known as The Bear. I mean, on the one hand, it's a devastating thought, realizing Mikey was saving all of this money knowing that one day he wouldn't be there to share in the dream he had with his brother, but on the other, it's a supremely satisfying way for a beautifully written and acted season to sign off."[9]

Accolades edit

TVLine named Jeremy Allen White as the "Performer of the Week" for the week of July 2, 2022, for his performance in the episode. The site wrote, "As the talented but troubled chef at the center of Hulu's frenetically paced restaurant drama, the Shameless vet cooked up a fascinating lead performance: a little salty and a little spicy, with lots of interesting flavors and textures layered in. In the poignant season finale — that we're really hoping isn't a series finale — White dug deep into what really makes his character Carmy tick and blew us away with a mesmerizing monologue that was part scathing confessional, part much-needed pep talk."[10]

For his performance, Jeremy Allen White was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series. In addition, Jon Bernthal received a nomination for Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series.

References edit

  1. ^ Pedersen, Erik (May 13, 2022). "FX Summer Premiere Dates: 'Reservation Dogs', 'What We Do In The Shadows', New Series 'The Old Man' & 'The Bear', More". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  2. ^ "(#101-108) "Season 1"". The Futon Critic. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  3. ^ Squires, Kathleen (July 14, 2022). "How FX on Hulu's 'The Bear' Got Its Recipe for Braciole—the Ultimate Comfort Food—Just Right". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  4. ^ Gordinier, Jeff (July 22, 2022). "A Conversation with the Guy Who Created The Bear". Esquire. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Hadadi, Roxana (July 11, 2022). "Jeremy Allen White Had Some Questions About The Bear's Finale". Vulture. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  6. ^ Friedlander, Whitney (June 29, 2022). "The Making of The Bear's Showstopper Monologue: "It's a Love Letter"". Vanity Fair. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  7. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (July 2, 2022). "'The Bear' Is the Most Stressful Thing on TV Right Now. It's Also Great". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 17, 2023.
  8. ^ Eakin, Marah (June 28, 2022). "The Bear Season-Finale Recap: Let It Rip". Vulture. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  9. ^ Kocan, Liz (June 30, 2022). "'The Bear' on Hulu: Ending Explained". Decider. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  10. ^ "The TVLine Performer of the Week: Jeremy Allen White". TVLine. July 2, 2022. Retrieved July 11, 2023.

External links edit

braciole, bear, braciole, eighth, episode, first, season, finale, american, television, comedy, drama, bear, episode, written, series, creator, christopher, storer, executive, producer, joanna, calo, directed, storer, released, hulu, june, 2022, along, with, r. Braciole is the eighth episode and first season finale of the American television comedy drama The Bear The episode was written by series creator Christopher Storer and executive producer Joanna Calo and directed by Storer It was released on Hulu on June 23 2022 along with the rest of the season 1 Braciole The Bear episodeEpisode no Season 1Episode 8Directed byChristopher StorerWritten byChristopher Storer Joanna CaloProduced byTyson BidnerFeatured music Let Down by RadioheadCinematography byAndrew WehdeEditing byJoanna NaugleOriginal release dateJune 23 2022 2022 06 23 Running time48 minutesGuest appearancesMatty Matheson as Neil Fak Edwin Lee Gibson as Ebraheim Corey Hendrix as Gary Chris Witaske as Pete Carmen Christopher as Chester Joel McHale as Executive Chef Jon Bernthal as Michael BerzattoEpisode chronology Previous Review Next Beef List of episodesThe series follows Carmen Carmy Berzatto an award winning New York City chef de cuisine who returns to his hometown of Chicago to run his late brother Michael s failing Italian beef sandwich shop In the episode Carmy faces his past while trying to repair the situation with the restaurant The episode received acclaim from critics with Jeremy Allen White s performance receiving universal praise particularly for a 7 minute monologue delivered early in the episode Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Development 2 2 Writing 2 3 Filming 3 Critical reviews 3 1 Accolades 4 References 5 External linksPlot editCarmy Jeremy Allen White is haunted by the recurring voice of Michael Jon Bernthal He attends an Al Anon meeting where he finally opens up about his past He explains how he and Michael shared an interest in food and planned on opening a restaurant He was unaware of Michael s drug use and their relationship dwindled eventually causing Michael to not allow him to work at The Beef This inspired Carmy to pursue cuisine in other restaurants Upon inheriting The Beef after Michael s death Carmy considers that he is fixing the restaurant in order to fix his relationship with Michael He claims it is everything to him but wonders if it means anything to Michael Marcus Lionel Boyce meets with Syd Ayo Edebiri at her apartment where he eats one of her meals Their conversation soon turns into their new journeys with both having quit The Beef At The Beef Carmy informs everyone that the restaurant will be closed that night due to a bachelor party for Cicero s friends As Carmy and Richie Ebon Moss Bachrach talk outside a fight breaks out during the party Richie tries to control the situation by assaulting one of the men who are fighting but after Richie punches him the man loses consciousness and is admitted to a hospital intensive care unit Richie is arrested with the possibility of a manslaughter charge if the victim does not survive The man wakes up and Richie is charged with aggravated assault He is released when Carmy bails him out Marcus returns to The Beef Carmy apologizes for his behavior which Marcus accepts When Carmy starts a fire on the stove he zones out and the others have to put the fire out Carmy decides to contact Syd apologizing for his behavior Richie talks with him giving him a letter from Michael addressed to Carmy that was found wedged behind the employee lockers On one side of the letter Michael wrote I love you dude Let it rip a phrase Carmy previously shared that Michael had used to encourage Carmy On the opposite side of the letter is a family meal spaghetti recipe which indicates that they should use smaller cans of tomatoes because they taste better apparently finally solving the mystery of why Michael was ordering small cans rather than big ones which Carmy had been wondering Carmy retrieves one and starts cooking until he notices a bag in the tomatoes The bag contains money so Carmy and the crew retrieve more cans all of which contain money as well Syd returns and agrees to come back to work Carmy announces the closure of The Beef intending to open a new restaurant The Bear He then joins the crew to dine envisioning Michael smiling back at him Production editDevelopment edit In May 2022 Hulu confirmed that the eighth episode of the season would be written by series creator Christopher Storer and executive producer Joanna Calo and directed by Storer This was Storer s fourth writing credit Calo s second writing credit and Storer s fifth directing credit 2 The title is based on the dish of the same name but The Wall Street Journal offered a different interpretation of the title The word braciole by the way translates from Italian as chops Does Carmy have the chops to lead and turn around the family restaurant Does he have what it takes to move past his brother s tragic death 3 Writing edit Regarding the final scene Storer explained In terms of the restaurant changing it s not that they re going to lose all the charm of the restaurant We re going to deal with this in season two It s more like How can we do this and maybe make some money And maybe make it easier And maybe maybe start from a place that s not fucked Instead of beating a dead horse and making this fuckin food that no one even wants to make I see the promise in my sort of found family in the kitchen Can we use that to build something freshly now that we ve all found each other in this stupid ass system where things make no sense and people are putting veal stock on the top fuckin shelf of the walk in 4 The opening sequence was originally different While it would still involve Carmy in a cooking show he would actually be accompanied by a female celebrity chef Carmy would confuse her for his mother and then hug her while sobbing However the celebrity chef was confused about the scene and decided to drop out of the series forcing the writers to re write the scene 5 Filming edit Carmy s seven minute monologue was filmed on the last day of shooting for the season White rehearsed the monologue at his apartment even feeling that he performed better at that point than in the final cut He explained Chris has had this character in his mind for like ten years and I knew how important that moment was to understand Carmy understand the story and to make sense of the stuff that was going on I felt a lot of pressure 5 Storer said In this scene I think there s a sense of discovery that all of his accolades and his quest to become this highly skilled individual were perhaps for the wrong reasons And that all culminates with an anger pointed at his older brother that real sense of feeling unloved or forgotten by a family member 6 Critical reviews edit nbsp Jeremy Allen White s performance in the episode received universal acclaim from critics Braciole received acclaim from critics Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote On the one hand this happy ending and setup for a second season feels pretty jury rigged Why was Michael hiding the money in the tomato cans Won t Carmy just have to pay back his uncle rather than invest all this cash turning Beef into Bear And yet that family meal feels like exactly what Carmy Sydney the rest of the chefs and those of us in the audience needed The brief glimpse of Michael looking over his shoulder and smiling as if he can somehow witness what he left behind for Carmy and the others couldn t be lovelier 7 Marah Eakin of Vulture gave the episode a perfect 5 star out of 5 rating and wrote Folks Jeremy Allen White is a good actor He s been lighting up every episode of The Bear as Carmy the tortured genius chef with all manner of problems but in Braciole the season one finale he comes in so hot with an Al Anon monologue that I d be shocked shocked I say if I didn t see it on every awards reel submitted to every TV voter next year 8 Liz Kocan of Decider wrote In the last moments of the season Carmy puts a sign in the window notifying customers that The Beef is closing and in its place will stand a new venture known as The Bear I mean on the one hand it s a devastating thought realizing Mikey was saving all of this money knowing that one day he wouldn t be there to share in the dream he had with his brother but on the other it s a supremely satisfying way for a beautifully written and acted season to sign off 9 Accolades edit TVLine named Jeremy Allen White as the Performer of the Week for the week of July 2 2022 for his performance in the episode The site wrote As the talented but troubled chef at the center of Hulu s frenetically paced restaurant drama the Shameless vet cooked up a fascinating lead performance a little salty and a little spicy with lots of interesting flavors and textures layered in In the poignant season finale that we re really hoping isn t a series finale White dug deep into what really makes his character Carmy tick and blew us away with a mesmerizing monologue that was part scathing confessional part much needed pep talk 10 For his performance Jeremy Allen White was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series In addition Jon Bernthal received a nomination for Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series References edit Pedersen Erik May 13 2022 FX Summer Premiere Dates Reservation Dogs What We Do In The Shadows New Series The Old Man amp The Bear More Deadline Hollywood Retrieved July 11 2023 101 108 Season 1 The Futon Critic Retrieved July 11 2023 Squires Kathleen July 14 2022 How FX on Hulu s The Bear Got Its Recipe for Braciole the Ultimate Comfort Food Just Right The Wall Street Journal Retrieved July 11 2023 Gordinier Jeff July 22 2022 A Conversation with the Guy Who Created The Bear Esquire Retrieved July 11 2023 a b Hadadi Roxana July 11 2022 Jeremy Allen White Had Some Questions About The Bear s Finale Vulture Retrieved July 11 2023 Friedlander Whitney June 29 2022 The Making of The Bear s Showstopper Monologue It s a Love Letter Vanity Fair Retrieved July 11 2023 Sepinwall Alan July 2 2022 The Bear Is the Most Stressful Thing on TV Right Now It s Also Great Rolling Stone Retrieved May 17 2023 Eakin Marah June 28 2022 The Bear Season Finale Recap Let It Rip Vulture Retrieved July 11 2023 Kocan Liz June 30 2022 The Bear on Hulu Ending Explained Decider Retrieved July 11 2023 The TVLine Performer of the Week Jeremy Allen White TVLine July 2 2022 Retrieved July 11 2023 External links edit Braciole at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Braciole The Bear amp oldid 1189375096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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