50. Transparent - 'Elizah' - Episode 3.1
Despite the controversy that has
emerged over the series in the past year, one can't deny that there was an
energy and realism to this series that few TV shows on any service could have
provided. And in my mind, the high point
of the series came its most atypical outing, when Maura working at an LGBT
suicide hotline, receives a call from a troubled woman, and frantically goes on
a search to find her. A journey that becomes both increasingly surreal and
incredibly painful for Maura, mixed with a sermons from Raquel, makes for the
finest episode the series ever did. It may have been Jeffrey Tambor's finest
hour, and the fact that he won't be able to continue with the series next
season is another reason I won't watch any more.
49. True Detective -' The
Long Bright Dark' - Episode 1.1
Yes, there's no denying this
limited series degenerated into a hot mess, and turned what was the most highly
anticipated season into a disaster. But
that doesn't change the fact that for the briefest of moments, this series was one of the great achievements in HBO's
history, and that's saying something. And watching two of the worlds greatest
actors - Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey breath life into two of the
greatest characters they would ever play - particularly McConaughey, whose
Cohle's deterioration and philosophical stylings rank of there with some of the
greatest monologues of David Milch - made for some truly memorable TV. The fact
that the mystery itself may have been smoke and mirrors almost didn't matter -
that what happens with far too many of these shows.
48. The Blacklist - 'Anslo
Garrick - Part 1' - Episode 1.8
Considering how messy this series
eventually became, its easy to forget just how remarkable it was, particularly
in the first two season. Rarely has there been such a perfect match of
character to actor as there has been with Raymond Reddington to James Spader.
He works with such charm and smarminess that he almost makes you forget how
monstrous Raymond truly is. And yet Reddington's finest hour came when all of
his boundless energy was contained within a small, closet like box where he was
being held prisoner and tending to a man who would, at that point, have left
him to die had the tables been turned. As he tries to tell him to hang on the
life, he also witnesses the loss of one of his closest allies, only to
surrender his position when another friends is about to die. It may well have
Spader's greatest moment in the medium, and yes, I know he won three Emmys for
two other series.
47. Master of None - 'The
Thief' - Episode 2.1
There were so many brilliant comic
moments in this Netflix series all too brief run that its hard to pick which
episode was by far the best. One could easily choose 'Parents', the first
season episode which dealt with all the main characters problems with their
family, or the Emmy winning 'Thanksgiving'. But in my mind, the moment that
will probably linger far longer was the most daring experiment actor-showrunner
Aziz Ansari took. Set in Italy, after Dev relocated following the trauma of
season 1, the episode paid homage to the Italian neorealist classic The Bicycle Thief by having Dev lose
something even more vital than that of the hero of that film - his cell phone.
Mostly subtitled in Italian, and filmed in black and white, it was a glorious
production, and hysterical to watch. Ansari may be under a cloud now, but one
can't deny the brilliance of his work.
46. This is Us - 'Super Bowl
Sunday' - Episode 2.13.
As any longtime TV viewer can tell
you, its the rare revelation behind a series' big secret that lives up to the
hype. It is typical of just how brilliant this new series that when we finally
learned, after nearly two years, how Jack Pearson finally died that it packed
so much of a gut punch. And the writers did everything they possibly could to
make it sting more - we never saw Jack's
actual death, just some offscreen rushing, and Rebecca's reaction to it. That alone made it powerful. It was watching
how all the Pearsons reacted to it nearly two decades later that gave the
episode even more of a punch, particularly from Kevin, in the way he finally
confessed to his dad how he felt he had failed him. The rare Super Bowl episode
that actually lived up the hype, I see a lot of Emmys nods in this series
future.
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