logo
The Bear Season 4 Reviews Are In: Is It Worth Watching?

The Bear Season 4 Reviews Are In: Is It Worth Watching?

Graziadaily6 days ago
The much-awaited fourth series of The Bear has dropped on Disney+. Jeremy Allen White reprises his role as tortured chef Carmen 'Carmy' Berzatto in season four, alongside his team – Richard 'Richie' Jerimovich (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), Sydney Adamu (Ayo Edebiri), Marcus Brooks (Lionel Boyce) and Tina Marrero (Liza Colon-Zayas).
Reviews of the new episodes of the US comedy-drama emerged shortly after its premiere, and the latest series has left critics divided. Many are excited to see what's in store for Carmy in the rest of the season, while others appeared less than impressed. Most critics agree that the latest run is an improvement on the third series last year.
Here's what people think about the new series…
After all the drama and chaos from the past three series, the fourth run starts with a flashback of Uncle Jimmy (Oliver Platt), who has installed a countdown clock after investing in the fledgling Chicago restaurant The Bear, and trying to get the business to turn its fortunes around in 1,440 hours. Season four is less about the restaurant and more about the 'family', not just the blood relatives but friends and colleagues.
The fans have spoken – and they are rating season 4 of The Bear. It's had an impressive 83% popcornmeter and 74% tomatometer. The episodes are rating on IMDB too, with episodes four and eight receiving the lowest score of 8.3/10 while episodes three and six are the highest rated with scores of 9/10.
Entertainment Weekly's Kristen Baldwin gave a B+. 'Though not quite at the level of the sublime second season, the new episodes put Carmen and company back on track by allowing them to confront, at long last, 'the f***ing elephant in the f***ing restaurant'.'
The Guardian's Jack Seale awarded it 4/5. 'The Bear is finally becoming the show it was always destined to be,' he wrote. 'It's outgrown the 'Yes, chef!' rages and screaming matches in the pantry and morphed into something more tender, beautiful – and endlessly moving. Where once The Bear made pulses pound, now it lets the happy tears flow; the second half of the season is like one long therapy session. Indulge it – and you will have to indulge it, in a few ways – and you will find this experience just as rich.'
Rolling Stone rated it highly too, saying the series 'is at its best far more often this year than it was the last time we saw it', with TV Line calling it 'an absolute triumph'.
But not everyone was impressed. Vanity Fair called it 'slow', which was mirrored by Daily Telegraph, who said it is 'so aimless, pompous and, quite frankly, boring'.
With mixed reviews for the fourth series, it's best for viewers to decide for themselves as to whether they should tuck into a fourth helping – or refrain from this course. So here's the trailer if you need some persuasion…
All four seasons of The Bear are now streaming on Disney+
Shereen Low is a senior news and entertainment writer for Grazia UK, who has covered some of the biggest showbiz news from the past decade.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Review, The Bear, Disney+ returns to original recipe for new series
Review, The Bear, Disney+ returns to original recipe for new series

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Review, The Bear, Disney+ returns to original recipe for new series

*** AFTER the blood, sweat, tears, burns and shouting - lots of shouting - the review is in. What review you ask? How quickly they forget. Season three of The Bear, the Disney+ tale of a Chicago restaurant desperate for a Michelin star, was taken up with waiting for a make-or-break review. Sounds dull, was dull. The new 10-part series, which dropped today, opens with said review. As expected, it's a mixed bag, at once praising the restaurant's ambition while slating it for chaos and inconsistency. Sounds about right, both for restaurant and series. The Bear's creator, Christopher Storer, had a choice here: to double down on the misery and introspection, or strike out for pastures new. That he opens with a clip from Groundhog Day is a detectable-from-space clue to where he is heading. As is culinary wonderboy Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) breaking into a smile, and something approaching a chuckle. The Bear gets happy - I kid you not. That's the good news. The bad is the restaurant is bleeding money and will be forced to close in months if the team can't land that Michelin star. Finally, a cause that everyone can rally around. Front of house manager Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), still the show's best character and its secret sauce, can forget his ex is getting married and his daughter has a new daddy. Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) can seize the day and sign the partnership agreement. Carm can start helping people again instead of screaming at them. There is so much motivation going on, I half expected the theme tune from Rocky to strike up and the staff to run out en masse to climb the nearest steps. Wrong city, but everybody loves a comeback tale, right? Whether the hardcore fans of The Bear will feel the same I'm not sure. Can a show built on the unhappiness of its characters change so much and have the same appeal? Storer gives viewers no time to ponder. All that good stuff of old comes to the table - breakneck editing, pumping music, a sense of the team against the world, everybody yelling 'Doors' as the restaurant opens, and of course calling each other chef. There's a new character, the maitre d from Olivia Colman's old joint, who looks promising. There's even an attempt at some comedy, though so far that's still a work in progress. While it is fun getting back to The Bear basics, the show will stand or fall on its main characters, led by Carmy. In the last series, however, he was the weakest of the bunch, and you do wonder how much he has left to say. Others can take up the slack, starting with Jamie Lee Curtis as Carm's mommie dearest, Richie and Carm's sister Sugar (Abby Elliott). They will have to. Whatever its more passionate defenders thought, The Bear did not change television in the way, say, The Sopranos did. It was always soapier than it seemed, and it's no bad thing to go back there.

Coleen Rooney's earnings soar amid huge TV projects as she looks set to become 'main breadwinner' in family with husband Wayne
Coleen Rooney's earnings soar amid huge TV projects as she looks set to become 'main breadwinner' in family with husband Wayne

Daily Mail​

time7 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Coleen Rooney's earnings soar amid huge TV projects as she looks set to become 'main breadwinner' in family with husband Wayne

Coleen Rooney 's earnings soared amid her huge TV projects as she looks set to become her family's 'main breadwinner '. The WAG, 38, reportedly boasts a net worth of £15million, with her hubby thought to be worth an enormous £170million thanks to his Premier League footballing days. But in the new phase of their lives, Coleen could be set to take over as the main breadwinner as her popularity soars. Amid her skyrocketing fame following her hugely successful I'm A Celeb stint, Disney announced on Monday a new premium access series titled The Rooneys focusing on her and Wayne's life. Thanks to her ventures, new figures for her firm, CWR 2021, up to September 2024 show the booming business already had £580,000 banked - and that was before I'm A Celeb and her Disney deal. Meanwhile former manager of Plymouth Arsenal Wayne was reportedly making £500,000, before leaving the club in December. A financial expert told The Sun: 'These earnings show that, even before Coleen signed up for I'm A Celeb, she was already bringing in more money than Wayne. 'On the back of her jungle stint, where she was incredibly popular with the viewing public, she's now likely to see her earnings soar even further - and the increased interest in Coleen after she did so well on the show is also likely to have sealed the deal on the Disney contract. 'Getting big bucks from a global streamer, plus her pay cheque from ITV, will no doubt swell the Rooneys coffers even further.' MailOnline has contacted Coleen's representatives for comment. In March, Coleen revealed that she has eclipsed Wayne in popularity after starring on I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! Coleen took part on last year's series of the ITV show where she finished as runner up to McFlyn's Danny Jones after winning over a huge number of fans. And the mother-of-four has explained that she now gets even more attention in public than her famous footballer husband. Speaking to The Mirror at an event in Manchester, Coleen admitted she was humbled by the 'positivity' of people coming up to chat to her about her time in the jungle. She said: 'I didn't realise how big the audience was. I get parents come up to me saying "aw, we got our family back together on the couch to watch it" and that's lovely to hear.' Not being able to resist making a brutal dig at her husband, she then joked: 'Even on school runs, Wayne has passed his sell by date so no one has got a clue [about him] But then all of a sudden we get kids going "oh Coleen Rooney!"' Speaking of her popularity, Disney announced on Monday that a new premium access series titled The Rooneys is set to air, and filming is already underway. The ten part doc-series will delve into the footballer and WAG's lives 'like we've never seen them before'. It is set to see Coleen tackle 'new entrepreneurial endeavours' and Wayne stepping away from the football pitch to do school runs. The new show has 'unprecedented access' into their world and dives into their everyday life, including highs like holidays and celebrations as well as the lows. The 'at-home-with' format is expected to see former England footballer Wayne Rooney appear alongside his wife – runner-up on last year's I'm A Celebrity – and their four sons: Kai, 14, Kit, 11, Klay, eight, and Cass, six. Sources close to the project said earlier this year that Mrs Rooney, 39, will be paid £5 million with the remainder going to production company Lorton Entertainment, which made her previous show, Coleen Rooney: The Real Wagatha Story. One insider said: 'It has taken months of bidding against one another. The money has gone up and up and has got to £10 million, which is way higher than was first imagined, but Coleen is very much in demand. 'Both streamers were aware of the viewing public's appetite for the inside track on footballers' home lives. 'The Beckhams documentary was the most-watched show on Netflix in the UK last year, and has racked up more than 200 million hours of viewing time globally. 'Coleen is loved by the British public, especially since she played a blinder on I'm A Celeb. It wasn't surprising that Disney and Amazon wanted it and went head to head. 'It will make for compulsive viewing. It won't just feature Coleen but Wayne and their children, too.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store