Series: | Barry |
Season: | 4 |
Episode: | 7 |
Director: | Bill Hader |
Producer: |
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Photographer: | Carl Herse |
Editor: | Ali Greer |
Length: | 30 minutes |
Guests: |
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Prev: | the wizard |
Next: | wow |
"a nice meal" is the seventh episode of the fourth season of the American dark comedy crime television series Barry. It is the 31st episode overall and the penultimate episode of the series and was written by executive producer Liz Sarnoff and directed by series creator Bill Hader, who also serves as lead actor. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on May 21, 2023, and also was available on HBO Max on the same date.
The series follows Barry Berkman, a hitman from Cleveland who travels to Los Angeles to kill someone but finds himself joining an acting class taught by Gene Cousineau, where he meets aspiring actress Sally Reed and begins to question his path in life as he deals with his criminal associates such as Monroe Fuches and NoHo Hank. The previous seasons saw Barry try to decide between both lives, which culminated in his arrest. In the episode, Jim Moss subjects Barry, who escaped prison eight years ago and has returned to Los Angeles to kill Gene and gain control over his legacy, to psychological torture but changes his mind when Barry unwittingly reveals a critical piece of information. Meanwhile, Gene sees a new opportunity to win back his fame, while Hank tries to kill Fuches and his gang.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 0.237 million household viewers and gained a 0.07 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received critical acclaim, with critics praising the dark humor, performances, character development, writing, directing and set-up for the finale.
Jim Moss (Robert Wisdom) psychologically tortures Barry (Bill Hader), making him experience losing his loved ones. Meanwhile, Gene (Henry Winkler) and Tom (Fred Melamed) mount a campaign to boycott the production of Barry's biopic, with the public showing support for Gene.
Hank (Anthony Carrigan), angry at Fuches (Stephen Root) for blaming him for Cristobal's death, hires a team of skilled assassins to kill Fuches and his gang. However, the team is easily killed, and their heads are sent to Hank's office in boxes. As Jim prepares to physically torture Barry, Barry daydreams talking with Gene, apologizing for giving him the duffel bag with $250,000. This revelation surprises Jim, who corroborates the story from Lon O'Neil's notes. Gene, meanwhile, is contacted by Matt Iserson (Nate Corddry), a UTA agent. Iserson states that Daniel Day-Lewis wants to come out of retirement to portray Gene in the biopic, which interests him and prompts him to schedule a meeting. He is then called by Sally (Sarah Goldberg), who arrived in Los Angeles with John (Zachary Golinger), asking for help. Unwilling to miss the meeting, he tells her to come to his house.
Hank and his assistant try to kill Fuches' gang with a rocket-propelled grenade, but the missile misses the house and causes the gang to start firing at them, prompting them to escape in the car. However, the assistant is killed while driving, forcing Hank to flee on foot. His other assistant picks him up from a house, and he declares that he will need Barry, deducing that he must kidnap Gene as he may be the only one to know his location. Gene meets with Iserson at a park to discuss Day-Lewis portraying him. Iserson states that the studio also wants Mark Wahlberg to play Barry, but the actor is reluctant in playing a cop killer. Gene claims he can talk more about Barry's personality to make him more relatable and agrees to meet with Wahlberg in Beverly Hills.
Alone at the house, Barry frees himself from his bindings, although he falls unconscious in the kitchen after cutting his hand open when escaping the garage. Sally arrives at Gene's house, but no one answers. As she calms John, he asks what will they do after everything goes back to normal, causing her to go silent. Seeing a police officer nearby, she approaches him to turn herself in. However, the officer does not recognize her, and she hallucinates that he is the man she killed. The officer leaves, as Sally is unable to say anything. Suddenly, she sees John being pulled into a van by some of Hank's henchmen, while the others beckon for her to accompany them.
Iserson leads Gene to Wahlberg's hotel room. However, this proves to be a trap for Gene, who is confronted by Jim, DA Buckner (Charles Parnell), Leo (Andrew Leeds) and authorities for the $250,000. Iserson is actually an actor named Brad, who attended one of Gene's earliest acting classes in 2004. They suspect Gene has been lying, suggesting that he shot Leo after he discovered that Gene paid for his house using Chechen drug money. As Janice killed a Chechen and found drug money in Gene's class, they deduce that Gene was involved in the Chechen mafia's criminal activities and manipulated Barry into killing her at his cabin. This theory is also reinforced by the fact that he was found near her corpse with "The Raven."
Sally and John are kept in a room, where they are visited by Hank. Hank pulls off Sally's wig and calls her by her real name, confusing John. Back at Jim's house, Barry wakes up and retrieves his phone as it rings. He is answered by Hank, who confirms he has Sally and John hostage and tells him to meet him if he wants them safe, before hanging up. Barry stares at a wall, seething with rage.
In April 2023, the episode's title was revealed as "a nice meal" and it was announced that executive producer Liz Sarnoff had written the episode, while series creator and lead actor Bill Hader directed it. This was Sarnoff's fourth writing credit, and Hader's seventeenth directing credit.[1]
Explaining Gene's actions, Henry Winkler said, "He absolutely wants to do the right thing, but he is so egocentric. He is so spotlight-starved that he can't help himself. He realizes only afterwards that he has made a gross mistake."[2]
The episode was watched by 0.237 million viewers, earning a 0.07 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.07 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode.[3] This was a slight increase from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.232 million viewers with a 0.05 in the 18-49 demographics.[4]
"a nice meal" received critical acclaim. On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, it holds an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 9/10.[5] Matt Schimkowitz of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A" and wrote, "Without seeing the final episode, it's impossible to say how much of this classic Barry tone will make it to the finale. But, considering all the ravens coming home to roost, it does feel like we're heading toward a gutting (in more ways than one) finale. So amid all the plate stacking of 'a nice meal,' it lives up to its name. As the gangster suggested, the episode feels like we're getting a welcome diversion from the pain and misery, like we were taken for a nice meal while four dudes had their heads cut off. For a show that's never cared much what the audience thinks of it, 'a nice meal' plays to the rafters, giving us one last reminder that Barry is a comedy."[6]
Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote, "We head into the finale with Barry once again shot from behind, a motif Hader has used multiple times this season. We do not get to see the expression on his face as NoHo Hank threatens Barry's wife and son, but we don't need to. His body language, and everything we know about this damaged, dysfunctional, highly destructive man tells us where all this is headed. The only question left is how many other significant characters may wind up on that beach by the time all is said and done."[7] Ben Rosenstock of Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Even aside from the strong punchlines, though, there remains something essentially comic about Barry's view of people trapped with themselves, totally unable to resist the pull of the dark side. Even in some of the grimmest scenes, I can see Bill Hader's sense of humor shine through — his amusement at people pathetic enough to compromise every second chance the universe graciously provides them. I have no idea how everything will shake out in next week's finale, yet with one episode to go, it feels like everyone's fate is set in stone."[8]
Steve Greene of IndieWire gave the episode an "A–" and wrote, "For all the shows that Barry shares DNA with — crime dramas, black comedies, metaphysical treatises on morality — as the end nears, it's easiest to see Barry as basically a more dangerous version of The Other Two. Hollywood satire, over-confident narcissists plummeting to depths of their own digging, relationships shredded in a heartbeat. Add a few extra corpses to the Dubek family's peaks and valleys and you get something roughly approximating where Barry finds itself now: desperation, death, and jokes."[9] Josh Spiegel of /Film wrote, "'a nice meal' does a lot of what this season of Barry has done very well — balances a sense of unavoidable bleakness with some solid inside-baseball humor as well as some visually effective gags — while also making me wonder about this being the endgame."[10]