‘The Bear’ Season 5 review: Family-style final service earns its stars

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‘The Bear’ Season


After its last two underwhelming courses experimenting with overwrought plating over genuine flavour, The Bear finally remembers that restaurants survive on shared labour for its fifth and final service, taking its thumb off the scale long enough to let the brigade cook. Christopher Storer’s acclaimed FX series closes its kitchen by abandoning the cult of the tortured genius and embracing the miracle of collective competence, serving up its most nourishing meal in years.

Since its debut in 2022, The Bear has chronicled Jeremy Allen White’s celebrated chef Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto’s attempt to transform his late brother failing Chicago sandwich shop into an ambitious fine-dining restaurant, turning the rituals of professional kitchens into one of modern television’s defining metaphors for grief and inherited dysfunction. Its titillating amuse-bouche of a debut season announced an exciting new voice, while its stand-out sophomore delivered the defining appetiser that transformed The Bear into the hottest reservation on streaming. While the third disappeared into an over-conceptualised palate cleanser that mistook its gimmicky rarity for refinement, before the fourth course recovered enough substance to steady the meal, this splendid final dessert does fine work reminding us why we booked the table in the first place.

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The Bear Season 5 (English)

Creator: Christopher Storer

Cast: Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Lionel Boyce, Liza Colón-Zayas, Abby Elliott, Matty Matheson, Oliver Platt, Jamie Lee Curtis, Will Poulter, Sarah Ramos

Episodes: 10

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Runtime: 30–60 minutes

Storyline: Carmy steps away from the restaurant, forcing Sydney and the rest of The Bear‘s brigade to hold the kitchen together through one make-or-break day dinner service

The entire final season is set to the manic beats of a The Pitt-style single-day event after last season’s finale, when Carmy announces his decision to leave the restaurant just as financier Uncle Jimmy’s deadline for making the business profitable expires. Chef Sydney, played by a season-stealing Ayo Edebiri, suddenly inherits a restaurant operating on dwindling ingredients, collapsing infrastructure, financial insolvency, and a reservation system malfunctioning during torrential Chicago floods, while everyone around her privately wonders whether they’re preparing one final service before the restaurant hosts its own wake. It is an elegantly restrictive premise because Storer resists manufacturing fresh mythology when the existing fault lines already supply sufficient pressure.

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

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FX

The compression restores the sense of urgency that gradually leaked out of The Bear over the last two seasons. After marinating in beautifully photographed, self-indulgent digressions that repeatedly returned to the same emotional impasses, this season has neither the time nor the luxury. Burst plumbing is flooding the restaurant’s basement, the reservation software accidentally double-books service, ingredients are dwindling, Marcus anxiously prepares desserts while anticipating an awkward reunion with his estranged father, Tina is unraveling at the prospect of having to begin again after finally earning a place in a professional kitchen that believed in her, Natalie leaves her newborn with her emotionally volatile mother Donna, and Richie quite literally walks off a car-crash-induced concussion to lock himself into the most nerve-shredding dinner service of his life. Oh, and a Fak is hanging from the ceiling because somebody had to remind us that The Bear is, technically, still a comedy.

A workplace restructuring is in place this season, by taking Jeremy Allen White off the pass and back onto the line — it’s immediately obvious how thoroughly the show had imprisoned itself inside Carmy’s self-generated misery. Nevertheless, White remains extraordinary because he has perfected the physical vocabulary of permanently negotiating with internal catastrophe, communicating far more through his restless hands and darting glances. Carmy finally seems to have learnt when to stop talking, when to relinquish control, and when to recognise that perfectionism is an occupational hazard in the kitchen, which honestly feels like Storer auditing his own creative process over the last two years.

The season’s defining revelation, however, belongs to Ayo Edebiri, whose excellent performance becomes the kitchen’s new guiding hand. Sydney has always represented the possibility that brilliance could emerge through collaboration, and earlier seasons flirted with that proposition before inevitably handing the ladle back to TV’s favourite sad boy chef. This time, every meaningful decision belongs to her. She redesigns menus around vanishing ingredients, diffuses conflicts before they curdle into another Berzatto family crashout, steadies an increasingly exhausted brigade without lapsing into TED Talk optimism, and gradually proves that running a kitchen isn’t necessarily an exercise in hostage negotiation.

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

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FX

The supporting ensemble benefits enormously from this redistribution of attention because everybody finally receives work instead of simply receiving trauma. Liza Colón-Zayas gives Tina another beautifully observed performance rooted in ordinary anxieties about unemployment and starting over after finally discovering professional purpose. Lionel Boyce’s Marcus continues processing grief through pastry, although his low-stakes kitchen BL with Will Poulter’s guest-turned-series-regular Chef Luca almost steals the season, their bickering and eventual reconciliation proving considerably more charming than half the show’s canonical romances.

Ebon Moss-Bachrach continues performing one of television’s great long-form redemption arcs through Richie, whose journey from aggressively irritating cousin to indispensable front-of-house leader now feels almost inevitable in retrospect. Richie still delivers speeches with the collective conviction of every inspirational sports movie ever made, though Moss-Bachrach understands where sincerity curdles into self-parody and never crosses that invisible line. There is also a deeply gratifying payoff that indulges the long-simmering Richie-Jess agenda, with Sarah Ramos’s effortlessly composed hospitality veteran finally sharing enough crackling chemistry with Moss-Bachrach to vindicate years of audience shipping, culminating in a mischievous, almost unscripted exchange where Sydney catches on immediately and delights in teasing Richie while the two conspiratorially leave Carmy blissfully out of the joke.

Even the Faks become tolerable because the series finally understands proportionality. Their inscrutable Thing 1 and Thing 2 energy has long been one of The Bear‘s most unapologetically uncanny indulgences, and here, they finally seem to coalesce. Even the long-running meta joke of celebrity chef Matty Matheson playing the restaurant’s sweetest, neurodivergent handyman blossoms into something genuinely affecting, with Neil’s big boy moment this season.

Formally, Storer continues directing with restless confidence. The claustrophobic handheld photography, obsessive close-ups of immaculate food preparation, and Christian Lundberg’s propulsive, Nine Inch Nails-adjacent electronic score create sustained anxiety without leaning on the increasingly self-conscious indie playlists from previous outings. The series’ now-traditional Episode 7 pressure cooker once again earns its reputation, with “Caramel” joining the pantheon of The Bear‘s finest hours. Storer’s immaculate blocking constantly ricochets between the chaos of the kitchen and the restless dining room like two halves of the same circulatory system, every frantic movement behind the pass determining the illusion of effortless calm out front.

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

A still from ‘The Bear’ Season 5

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FX

The visuals still tend to fetishise professional labour, although the emphasis seems to have shifted away from romanticising suffering, toward documenting coordinated expertise. The shift places The Bear alongside workplace dramas like The Pitt or Industry, understanding that there is nothing inherently less dramatic about people doing their jobs exceptionally well under impossible pressure.

Season five still can’t entirely resist a few familiar recipes. Characters often remain constitutionally incapable of expressing an emotion without defaulting to therapeutic monologues, and Storer continues seasoning the series with earnest sermons about restaurants as surrogate families. Thankfully, these flourishes are now served in sensible portions to stop sentiment from overwhelming the plate.

Though it spent its five-season run persuading us that relentless immolation isn’t the secret ingredient behind culinary greatness, there still isn’t a psychologically well-adjusted person anywhere inside this restaurant. But when The Bear confines itself to the kitchen and trusts this brilliantly dysfunctional chosen family to do the heavy lifting, it rediscovers the flavour that made its ensemble such essential television. Its final service is rich, satisfying and, at long last, something the whole kitchen can take

Check please, chef.

The fifth and final season of The Bear is currently streaming on JioHotstar

Published – June 28, 2026 08:02 pm IST

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