The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (2023)

The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (1)

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It’s hard to think of any television show that has over-delivered on its premise more than “Barry.” You’d be forgiven for thinking a show billed as “a hitman begins taking acting classes” sounded like the worst idea on the planet when the series was announced in 2016. But if there’s one thing the show has definitively proven (even if we arguably should have known it before), it’s that you should never bet against Bill Hader.

Hader’s “Barry,” which he co-created with “Seinfeld” and “Silicon Valley” veteran Alec Berg, is more than just the first major TV role for a “Saturday Night Live” legend. It’s been a four season rollout for one of the most exciting filmmakers working today. And it happened alongside an overdue Henry Winkler renaissance; yet another knockout from Stephen Root; and breakout performances for Anthony Carrigan and Sarah Golberg.

From its very first episode, “Barry” established an inimitable style that blended gut-wrenching sadness with contemporary absurdism and meticulously measured doses of whimsy. Hader’s steady directorial hands and deep interest in the humanity of every single character allowed the show to shift focus from acting class personality clashes to international drug wars without ever losing its distinct brand of magic.

Over the course of its triumphant run, “Barry” has been many things. It’s been a dark comedy about the inevitable alienation that comes from living in Los Angeles. It’s been a drug drama with genuinely fascinating storylines about the illicit dealings between the most nefarious actors in Chechnya and Bolivia. It’s been an action thriller with occasionally jaw-dropping spectacle. And when they really want to fuck with our hearts, it’s been a Greek tragedy about how our past traumas sometimes turn us into someone — or something — utterly irredeemable.

In one sense, “Barry” is like a spaceship (“Fly like Bugs Bunny in—”) made of unfamiliar parts that you could never hope to reassemble if you smashed it. All of the strange little pieces make up such a beautiful whole that it can be difficult to rank the merits of one episode over another. But try, we must.

Ahead of this Sunday’s sure-to-be-devastating series finale, we ranked our 10 favorite episodes in terms of their filmmaking artistry and what they say about Barry Berkman’s emotional journey. Keep reading for our picks.

With editorial contributions by Wilson Chapman, Proma Khosla, Erin Strecker, and Ben Travers.

[Editor’s note:For episode titles in “Barry” Season 1, the “Chapter: —” formatting from Gene Cousineau’s acting book has been dropped, and subsequent episode titles have been capitalized.]

  • 10. “It Takes a Psycho” (Season 4, Episode 4)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (2)

    Where’s Barry: After breaking out of prison, Barry himself is barely in the episode, the tension of his escape haunting everyone he knows.Fuches takes a beating in the prison, his ignorance mistaken for loyalty to Barry that inspires respect in the other inmates, while Hank and Cristobal’s seemingly sunny joint venture ends up killing their whole crew in the most horrifying way — leading to their final, excruciating argument.

    Best hitman moment: It’s the hitman training that helps Barry disappear into the shadows of Sally’s apartment, teeing up a shocking ending and eight-year time jump.

    Best Hollywood moment: Probably Gene being forced into isolation because nothing else will stop him from talking to the press, but that one also turns sour when he accidentally shoots his own son. Can we sue this show for emotional damages? —PK

  • 9. “The Audition” (Season 2, Episode 7)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (3)

    Where’s Barry: Barry accompanies Sally to an agency meeting and ends up stumbling into a feature audition for the director (and “Barry” favorite Allison Jones, namedropped but not yet shown). Neither Sally nor Gene can conceal their surprise (“Whose cock did you have to suck in a former life?”), which leads to Goldberg’s magnificent poolside monologue.

    Best hitman moment: You could almost forget the hitman stuff for half of this episode, but then Fuches shows up pretending to be a PI and leads Cousineau straight to Janice’s body.

    Best Hollywood moment: Too many options, from “Prison Teens” to “Swim Instructors” to “Payback Ladies” (“It’s that time of the month… for REVENGE”) — but the best has to be everyone’s fixation on Barry’s height (he’s 6’2″). —PK

  • 8. “Ben Mendelsohn” (Season 3, Episode 3)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (4)

    Where’s Barry: Starring in a legal drama with Cousineau. In this early part of Season 3, Barry’s still trying to get Cousineau to forgive him for the murder of Janice Moss, and his solution is to make a stab at reviving the acting teacher’s career by getting them both bit parts in a procedural. But Cousineau’s anger proves harder to shake, and a call from Fuches pushes Barry to his emotional edge.

    Best hitman moment: There’s not much action in this setup episode, but the episode contains a pivotal moment for Barry’s moral journey. After spending the series attempting to leave his criminal life behind, Barry’s anger at Cousineau’s rejection pushes him to accept a job from NoHo Hank, showing he won’t be able to go clean.

    Best Hollywood moment: The episode’s name comes from the press junket for Sally’s show “Joplin,” a savage parody of the type of mindless promotion that often comes with making art in Hollywood. When asked about who will be the next Spider-Man, a distressed Sally can only think of the Emmy winning Australian as her answer. —WC

  • 7. “Forgiving Jeff” (Season 3, Episode 1)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (5)

    Where’s Barry:Opening on a sallow Barry standing in a field with a wavering client and his would-be mark Jeff, the unnvering Season 3 premiere sparked the end for Barry’s hellish Hannah Montana lifestyle. With a particularly snaky Sally thriving on the set of “Joplin,” Barry attempts to achieve a work-life balance: recklessly blending his identities in an episode that sees him asking a jilted murderess for flower advice one minute (“Do the colors mean different things?”) then holding a wise-up Cousineau at gunpoint the next — in the same aforementioned field, no less. “Forgiveness has to be earned,” the grieving thespian says in a moment of panic: teeing up the season’s brilliant, bloody thesis with the second of two (imagined) bullets to the forehead.

    Best hitman moment: Hader pushed the surrealism of “Barry” in Season 3, and those two fakeout headshots are among the show’s most memorable moments. But “Forgiving Jeff” wouldn’t be the triumph it is without its namesake first scene: arguably the best cold open in the show’s history. “He’s sorry for fucking my wife!” Barry’s regretful client pleads, before meeting an early demise next to the man he’d hired to have killed mere hours before. Berkman’s decisive slaughtering of the two — an understated but ruthless coda to the horrific Season 2 “Berkman > Block” monastery massacre — tells us everything we need to know about Barry’s state of mind with just enough situational silliness to earn its pitch-black punchline. “There’s no forgiving Jeff!” Barry bellows in a fiendish bit of foreshadowing made more biting by the unendingly satisfying Season 3 finale: “Starting Now.”

    Best Hollywood moment: There’s plenty of memorable meanness to Sally’s brutal #WomenSupportingWomen exchange with Natalie in this episode, but all-around best Hollywood parody comes from guest star Elizabeth Perkins. Her spectacularly spacey, multi-episode performance as barely-there studio exec Diane Villa peaks early with pitch-perfect deliveries on “Did you live with your mother when you were in high school?” and “I’m thinking of a different show.” —AF

  • 6. “Past = Present x Future Over Yesterday” (Season 2, Episode 3)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (6)

    Where’s Barry: A still-hopeful Barry is in the midst of preparing a monologue for acting class, but he’s struggling to recognize the truth of his chosen story (mainly because that truth isn’t as clean and heroic as movie monologues tend to be). He tries to get more details from Fuches — who’s spying on Barry for Agent Loach — but even Fuches warns Barry against openly discussing what happened after Albert was wounded in combat. Meanwhile, after a botched assassination attempt, Hank recruits Barry to train his men, while Sally’s monologue rewrites history regarding her abusive ex-husband, Sam.

    Best hitman moment: Hank trying to kill Barry goes about as well as you’d expect, but what makes the scene so memorable — beyond the comically bad shooting itself — is the sound design and camera framing. First, you just hear a few quick “thwp” noises. Then, Barry looks up from his computer, sees the bullet holes in the wall, and watches as one more smacks into the drywall. From there, episode director Minkie Spiro tracks Barry ducking for cover and grabbing his gun, before peeking out the window to see Hank and his not-so-sharp shooter positioned outside. By pivoting behind them, not only do we get to hear their frustrated banter, but it sets up Barry to return fire — and Barry doesn’t miss.

    Best Hollywood moment: Honestly, it’s Hank’s dream. To open the episode, Hank’s subconscious cooks up a local public access talk show with a fake Thomas Friedman where, per his chyron, North Hollywood Henry, outlines his plan to “stop Asia” from taking over the world. Where Friedman is a certified “Smart Person,” Hank, er, Henry is a “Smarter Person” (again, per his chyron). “So you know what Thomas Friedman? You are bad at writing, and nobody likes you.” —BT

  • 5. “Berkman > Block” (Season 2, Episode 8)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (7)

    Where’s Barry: From the opening seconds where Fuches is threatening to kill Gene to the closing moments when Gene remembers what Fuches whispers in his ear, the Season 2 finale is a tough one for ol’ Barry Berkman. He’s constantly reacting to the actions of others, which is great for his acting resume —like when he lets Sally play out the confrontation she never had with her ex-husband — but awful for his soul. Barry wants to believe he’s changed for the better. He tries to protect Gene from Fuches, and he tries to help his acting teacher avoid a murder charge that Barry’s responsible for. But when lured back to his old ways, he gives in: killing an entire army in pursuit of vengeance he can’t quite reach.

    Best hitman moment: “Berkman > Block” is defined by its ending, when Barry goes into a blind rage and kills a monastery full of mobsters (mobsters, it’s worth noting, that he knew because he trained them). Barry the assassin overrides Barry the actor and embarks on a merciless rampage without even realizing what he’s doing (or who he’s killing). By the time it’s over, Barry simply recedes into the darkness, accepting a tragic fate — that maybe he can’t change for the better — and sending him down a dark path that, two seasons later, he has yet to resolve.

    Best Hollywood moment: Watching the acting class absolutely bomb in front of a packed auditorium of agents and managers is one of the few consistent sources of humor in Episode 8, but the “best” Hollywood moment is Sally’s unexpected success. By lying about how she responded to her abusive husband, she earns accolades from a crowd that’s so eager to support women, they don’t care whether supporting Sally actually helps her — or women who’ve been through similar experiences. Hollywood would rather tell a positive, simple, and uplifting story than dig into the complications tied to her history, and in doing so here, Sally’s triumph illustrates the industry’s exploitative nature. —BT

  • 4. “Know Your Truth” (Season 1, Episode 8)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (8)

    Where’s Barry: Barry wants out. At the end of the first season he’s desperate to get away from the hitman life, telling Fuches to forget about him and hoping to pursue acting full-time away from all the murdering.

    Best hitman moment: It’s looking bad for Fuches in this episode, tied up in Pazar’s garage about to be killed now that he has outgrown his usefulness. But thanks to a tip from Hank, Barry realizes he can’t let his one-time mentor die, so he secretly shoots all the Chechens dead through a window in the wall. He promises he’s done with the killing after that, but, well, Detective Moss had to go and put together who he really is, threatening the new, relatively peaceful life he’s build for himself. RIP Janice.

    Best Hollywood moment: Sally and Barry are going to perform “Zoo Story.” And they’re going to switch roles every night! “So you’re expecting people to come multiple times?” —ES

  • 3. “Loud, Fast, and Keep Going” (Season 1, Episode 7)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (9)

    Where’s Barry: Making his biggest mistake yet. After a botched attack on the Bolivians leaves several men dead, Barry is forced to deal with the stress while prepping for his acting class’ showcase. His friend Chris is taking the fact that he killed someone to protect Barry even worse, and decides he needs to hand himself in to the police. Knowing that this will put himself in a position to go to jail, Barry reacts calmly: by shooting Chris dead and staging the scene as a suicide.

    Best hitman moment: The scene where Barry kills Chris is one of the most gutting sequences of the show, as the lovable hitman kills one of his only friends in a cowardly act to save himself from jail. It’s the earliest sign that as much as we’ve been primed to root for Barry, redemption might not be something he deserves.

    Best Hollywood moment: Barry’s guilt leads to an emotional breakdown during his acting class’ showcase, where he only has to deliver one line to Sally. But, in a moment that merges the acting world with the hitman world, Sally is able to use the emotion of Barry’s one line to deliver her best performance yet, impressing a talent agent and giving her the career boost she’s been craving. —WC

  • 2. “710N” (Season 3, Episode 6)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (10)

    Where’s Barry: Driving up 710N. Everyone’s on the downswing this episode: Hank’s lost Cristobal, Sally’s show was canceled, and Fuches rejects the love of a good woman in favor of his desire for revenge against Barry. But Barry, still reeling from his breakup with Sally, seems to be on the upswing when he gets invited to a dinner from his military friend/murder victim Chris’ widow Sharon — only to get into attacked by a murderous biker gang pinned on him by Fuches while trying to deliver beignets to the party.

    Best hitman moment: The motorcycle highway chase that gives the episode its name is a jaw-dropping highlight of the show in general, and the best display of Bill Hader’s directorial prowess. It works expertly as both a genuinely intense action moment, and as a parody of those moments, as the hitman trying to kill Barry prove clumsier and less adept than expected.

    Best Hollywood moment: One of “Barry’s” single funniest moments is the scene where Vanessa Bayer, as an exec, and Jessy Hodges, as Sally’s agent, negotiate a deal for Sally to work on a show for the BanShe streaming service. Watching both actors make a meal out of the scene, where they discuss how Sally can bring “yeah!” energy to the project, is a much-needed treat from Season 3’s intense darkness. —WC

    (Video) Barry - Barry breaks down when Albert confronts him. (You're not evil)

  • 1. “Ronny/Lily” (Season 2, Episode 5)

    The Best ‘Barry’ Episodes, from ‘710N’ and ‘Forgiving Jeff’ to ‘It Takes a Psycho’ (11)

    Where’s Barry: Back in the killing game with Fuches, after repeatedly insisting that he wanted out. (What else is new?) When new evidence surfaces that has the potential to incriminate the on-again-off-again friends, they agree to kill a divorced detective’s ex-wife’s new boyfriend to get him to look the other way. But they foolishly forget to plan for the one thing that every hitman should be looking out for: a child who’s an expert at Taekwondo. While the episode certainly adds texture to the long term arc of Barry’s relationship with Fuches, the real beauty of “ronny/lily” comes from its self-contained nature. It’s a detour from Barry’s tragic downfall that illustrates just how absurd his hitman lifestyle could get.

    Best hitman moment: A brutal one-shot fight sequence in which Ronny and his reluctant assassin Barry enter and exit the frame while beating the tar out of each other. The utter brutality of the scene and the way Hader forces us to rely on horrifying audio strips Barry’s actions of any aura of glamour that they still had.

    Best Hollywood moment: The slow build to the realization that Lily can’t possibly be human — which climaxes with her biting Fuches’ cheek off while he’s incapable of fighting back due to his hands being glued to the steering wheel. It’s the kind of surrealism that would normally seem more at home in something like “Atlanta” than “Barry,” but it ended up being the perfect emotional break from the tension that was building throughout the season. —CZ

(Video) Barry - You're forgiving Jeff?

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FAQs

How many episodes are there in Barrie? ›

The series has received various accolades, including 44 Primetime Emmy Award nominations.
...
Barry (TV series)
Barry
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes31 (list of episodes)
Production
19 more rows

How many episodes are in season 1 of Barry? ›

How old is Barrie Youngfellow? ›

Where is Chris Barrie now? ›

Born and raised in Northern Ireland, Chris Barrie now lives near Maidenhead. Chris has a wife and children, two dogs and a growing collection of classic cars and motorbikes.

How old is Barry in season 8? ›

Barry is de-aged to 29 years old and Orloff is sent to prison. One week later, Barry goes to Caitlin's apartment and learns about her plan to restore Frost. She refuses to accept that Frost is gone, so Barry wrecks her equipment. A new speedster stops a fire at Ivo Labs, but also steals a Newton Battery.

How old is Barry Allen in season 1 episode 1? ›

Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) was just 11 years old when his mother was killed in a bizarre and terrifying incident and his father (John Wesley Shipp) was falsely convicted of the murder.

Will there be a season 5 of Barry? ›

No, there won't be a Barry Season 5, because the show is ending with its fourth season. The moment Barry was apprehended by the SWAT team, fans started suspecting that the next season could close the curtain on his story. Sure enough, Hader confirmed it in an interview with Variety earlier this year.

Who are the 6 boys dead in Barrie? ›

On the early morning of Aug. 28, police, who were conducting a missing persons investigation, located a crash scene on McKay Road, east of County Road 27, and found six people dead. They were identified as Curtis King, 22; River Wells, 23; Jason Ono-O'Connor, 22; Luke West, 22; Jersey Mitchell, 20; and Haley Marin, 21.

How old is Melanie La Barrie? ›

She sounds like their mother, referring to them as kids, and yet La Barrie is only 33 herself.

How old is Wendy Barrie? ›

Is Chris Barrie married? ›

Why was Chris Barrie not in season 7? ›

According to the BBC website, Barrie left because he felt "he had taken Rimmer as far as he wanted", while the Series VII DVD featurette "Back from the Dead" indicated it was due to the fact that Barrie was simultaneously starring in a second series, The Brittas Empire.

What happened to Mr Brittas? ›

For the first five series the show's creators Richard Fegen and Andrew Norriss co-wrote every episode. After series 5 they left, along with actress Julia St John who played deputy manager Laura. At the end of Series 5 Norriss and Fegen killed off Brittas when he was crushed to death by a falling water tank.

Did Barry and Kara ever kiss? ›

Barry's visit was all worth it, since it led up to his and Kara's big kiss. Unfortunately, there's some mind control getting in between the two of them (again!).

How old is Barry Allen season 7? ›

In the series, Barry is 25 and portrayed as a smart, goofy and tardy character, who works at the Central City Police Department as a forensic chemist.

What is Barry Allen's full name? ›

The Flash (Bartholomew Henry "Barry" Allen) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is the second character known as the Flash, following Jay Garrick. The character first appeared in Showcase #4 (October 1956), created by writer Robert Kanigher and penciler Carmine Infantino.

Who is the fastest speedster? ›

Barry Allen & Wally West, The Fastest Men Alive

The reason The Flash is so powerful is his connection to the Speed Force, it's where he draws his power from. Barry Allen created the Speed Force and is able to reverse time and alter reality itself.

Who is the fastest Flash? ›

Wally West is the Fastest Flash and is arguably the fastest being that has ever existed, as said by Max Mercury—and it has been remarked that Wally and Barry are the only two speedsters that were fast enough to even outrun death itself.

Who is Flash's daughter? ›

Nora West-Allen, the daughter of Barry and Iris from the TV series The Flash. Nora Allen (The Flash), Barry's mother from the TV series The Flash. "Nora" (The Flash episode), 1st episode of the 5th season of The Flash.

Is Barry is season 13? ›

With Hader announcing that "Barry" Season 4 will be the last (the series returns Sunday, 10 EDT/PDT), it's the end of the line for everyone, including Gene.

Who writes for Barry? ›

Does Netflix have Barry? ›

Is Barry on Netflix or Amazon Prime? While Netflix has plenty of excellent original series, Barry is an HBO Original. That means it's only available to watch on the premium HBO network for cable subscribers or its streaming counterpart, HBO Max (soon to be known as simply, 'Max').

How many Baptiste episodes are there? ›

Like many popular dramas. there will be six episodes of Baptiste, each airing on a Sunday night.

How many episode episodes are there? ›

Episodes (TV series)
Episodes
No. of episodes41 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersDavid Crane Jeffrey Klarik Jimmy Mulville
Production locationsHollywood Windlesham
20 more rows

How many episodes will there be in the series from? ›

How Many Episodes Are There in From Season 2? From Season 2 has been ordered for 10 episodes, with each episode running for 45-55 minutes, which is the same format as the series' first season, which also had 10 episodes. After the season premiere, each new episode will release weekly on the streamer.

How many episodes come in a season? ›

If you're still tuning into week-to-week broadcast television, you know you're typically in for 18-22 episodes a season.

Is it worth watching Baptiste? ›

Movie Reviews By Reviewer Type

A quietly unfolding drama in six episodes, it's coolly gripping and well thought-out. He's Baptiste. And played with pitch-perfect understatement and confidence by Tchéky Karyo, there's still more than enough of him to make for a fine crime drama.

Are they making series 3 of Baptiste? ›

The final episode spent the last fifteen minutes of the mystery not on yet another terrorist attack but a quiet ending that saw Baptiste head home to France and adjust to being home as a grandparent. That's because there is no Season 3 to come.

What does Baptiste mean in French? ›

The name Baptiste is primarily a male name of French origin that means Baptist Or Baptized. Referring to John the Baptist, in French it often comes after the name Jean to form Jean-Baptiste.

What is the longest TV episode? ›

Unless you count Sense8's 152-minute finale, which originally aired as a standalone movie, or Norway's “Slow TV” phenomenon, (real-time, marathon broadcasts of train rides, knitting contests, and fishing outings that draw surprisingly robust ratings), that may make it the longest single television episode ever made.

What TV has the most episodes ever? ›

"Gunsmoke"

Inspired by the classic radio drama, "Gunsmoke," the highly-acclaimed TV series depicting the settlement of the American West, aired on CBS from 1955 to 1975. During those 20 seasons, it racked up an astounding 635 episodes, the most of any scripted primetime series ever.

What is the longest running TV series episodes? ›

Single show
ProgramGenreEpisode count
Days of Our LivesSoap opera14,430
As the World TurnsSoap opera13,858
Eat Bulaga!Variety show13,483
The Young and the RestlessSoap opera12,549
63 more rows

Is the from series over? ›

On April 24, 2022, Epix renewed the series for a second season which is scheduled to premiere on April 23, 2023. A third season is in active development.

Where can I watch episodes? ›

Episodes (Official Series Site) Watch on Showtime.

Why are there 12 episodes in a season? ›

The reasons for this vary, but the main ones are financial (it costs a lot of money for a full season ) and scheduling competition (they often run shows in the summer, and a full 22-episode season would run into the fall season and force the shows to compete with the major networks.)

When did TV seasons get shorter? ›

In 2017, Bend Lindbergh wrote a great article for The Ringer detailing how the lengths of TV seasons had decreased over the decades, with shows often having seasons with 20+ episodes going way back to the 50s, before many dropped to 10 or 13 in the late 2010s.

Why are streaming seasons so short? ›

Streaming services don't take a break like networks do in summer or winter, though now they are shifting. The shorter seasons can prevent fan fatigue. A Quora piece added that the shorter seasons allow the networks to give the shows bigger budgets so the episodes can be better quality-wise.

How long is a full season? ›

According to this definition, each season begins on the first of a particular month and lasts for three months: Spring begins on March 1, summer on June 1, autumn on September 1, and winter on December 1.

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