Bojack Horseman season 6 review Archives - OMG Check It Out ! Wed, 05 Feb 2020 06:35:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 “Bojack Horseman” Comes to Its Bitter Conclusion https://omgcheckitout.com/bojack-horseman-comes-to-its-bitter-conclusion/ Wed, 05 Feb 2020 06:30:00 +0000 https://omgcheckitout.com/?p=36793 After six seasons of gritty, grueling drama, Bojack Horseman has finally come to its bitter conclusion. What started out as a satirical comedy about a depressed washed-up celebrity evolved into something far more illuminating and far more important. One of the recurring themes in the show is celebrities getting away with terrible behavior because they […]

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After six seasons of gritty, grueling drama, Bojack Horseman has finally come to its bitter conclusion. What started out as a satirical comedy about a depressed washed-up celebrity evolved into something far more illuminating and far more important.

One of the recurring themes in the show is celebrities getting away with terrible behavior because they are famous. Vance Waggoner, a character who behaves atrociously is continuously able to revive his career by publically apologizing. Fittingly, he returns in season 6 as Bojack’s sponsor and they bond over being canceled. Elsewhere in the season, Margo Martindale is finally put on trial for murder, only to be let off the hook when she is offered a part in a movie. And finally, Bojack serves a short-term prison sentence with a movie offer waiting for him when he leaves. As Princess Carolyn reminds him, the best and worst thing about Hollywood is that it has a short memory.

By the end of season six, it feels like Bojack’s journey is already over. The anti-hero we have been reluctantly routing for loses everything and degenerates back into a cycle of addiction and self-loathing. He may be serving his time in prison but the people he loves will not be waiting for him on the outside. Princess Carolyn has found love, Dianne has learned it’s not her job to fix Bojack, and Hollyhock presumably wants nothing to do with him. It’s the ending Bojack deserves.

More importantly, however, Princess Carolyn and Dianne get the ending they deserve too. In “Good Damage”, Dianne navigates life on anti-depressants and has to face the fact that the book she has always wanted to write is not something she actually wants to write. Instead of forcing herself, she realizes that she can write a fun teenage detective story if she wants to and that’s ok. The damage that she has been desperately trying to make into something beautiful is a part of her and she can harness what she has learned in whatever she writes. It’s a triumphant and powerful moment.

Ultimately then, the best thing about season six of Bojack Horseman is that it isn’t entirely about Bojack. It is just as much about the people who have suffered at his hand. More than this, it is a profound social commentary on the toxicity of celebrity culture. And that is why Bojack Horseman will always be our favorite show about a depressed cartoon horse(man).

5/5

The post “Bojack Horseman” Comes to Its Bitter Conclusion appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

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“Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review https://omgcheckitout.com/bojack-horseman-season-6-part-one-review/ Sat, 02 Nov 2019 12:20:13 +0000 https://omgcheckitout.com/?p=35037 The first part of the Bojack Horseman series finale has landed on Netflix and once again, the show proves itself to be the best cartoon about a depressed horse on Netflix. The final season begins with Bojack in rehab. After seasons of running away from his problems and using alcohol to forget about them, Bojack […]

The post “Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

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The first part of the Bojack Horseman series finale has landed on Netflix and once again, the show proves itself to be the best cartoon about a depressed horse on Netflix.

The final season begins with Bojack in rehab. After seasons of running away from his problems and using alcohol to forget about them, Bojack finally seeks the help he desperately needs. He writes letters to Dianne, informing her of his progress. Even if his counselor is full of useless aphorisms, Bojack successfully commits to sobriety. For the first time ever on the show, we see some real character development. In spite of the comical slipups that occur along the way, the cycle of doing appalling things and self-deprecation seems to be weaning.

Meanwhile, Princess Carolyn is struggling to balance her work life with her new baby. Fittingly, her baby is a porcupine who pricks her every time she pics him up. For a while, it seems that once again, Princess Carolyn is putting her work-life before her personal life. By the end of the season, however, she too shows signs of genuine character development.

As always, the season is filled with witty animal puns and seeded irony. The show continues to heavily criticize the toxicity of Hollywood culture and in the same breath, the show turns this painful criticism in on itself. It achieves this in a way that is both devastating and brilliantly funny.

By the end of the season, Bojack seems to be transformed into a new horse. He faces up to his problems, takes responsibility for his decisions and last but not least, he gets a haircut. He apologizes to Princess Carolyn for all the liberties he has taken; he gives Dianne some helpful advice and finally, he gives Mr. Peanutbutter the crossover episode he has always wanted.

Just as we start to feel happy for Bojack, we are reminded in the cruellest way that he is not, for lack of a better word, a good person. Two new characters are introduced to the storyline as reporters looking to find out the cause of Sarah Lynn’s tragic death. We already know, of course, who is responsible. In addition, the actress Gina Cazador is a damaged woman after the trauma she endured when Bojack strangled her and at the end of the episode, we are reminded of the time Bojack got two teens drunk and left them at the hospital. This time, however, we hear the story from the victim’s point of view.

Hollyhock’s expression right before she finds out that the culprit of the story is Bojack is exactly how we felt watching the season finale. For a second there, we felt proud of Bojack for overcoming his issues and taking steps to become a better man. Any sympathy we extended to the character gets torn away as we are reminded firmly that he had done terrible things. He may be accepting responsibility for the things he has done, but the law and the public still need to hold him accountable regardless of his celebrity status. And that double-sided sword of an ending is exactly what makes Bojack Horseman so devastatingly brilliant.

5/5

The post “Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

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ersion="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> Bojack Horseman season 6 review Archives - OMG Check It Out ! Wed, 05 Feb 2020 06:35:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 “Bojack Horseman” Comes to Its Bitter Conclusion https://omgcheckitout.com/bojack-horseman-comes-to-its-bitter-conclusion/ Wed, 05 Feb 2020 06:30:00 +0000 https://omgcheckitout.com/?p=36793 After six seasons of gritty, grueling drama, Bojack Horseman has finally come to its bitter conclusion. What started out as a satirical comedy about a depressed washed-up celebrity evolved into something far more illuminating and far more important. One of the recurring themes in the show is celebrities getting away with terrible behavior because they […]

The post “Bojack Horseman” Comes to Its Bitter Conclusion appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

]]>
After six seasons of gritty, grueling drama, Bojack Horseman has finally come to its bitter conclusion. What started out as a satirical comedy about a depressed washed-up celebrity evolved into something far more illuminating and far more important.

One of the recurring themes in the show is celebrities getting away with terrible behavior because they are famous. Vance Waggoner, a character who behaves atrociously is continuously able to revive his career by publically apologizing. Fittingly, he returns in season 6 as Bojack’s sponsor and they bond over being canceled. Elsewhere in the season, Margo Martindale is finally put on trial for murder, only to be let off the hook when she is offered a part in a movie. And finally, Bojack serves a short-term prison sentence with a movie offer waiting for him when he leaves. As Princess Carolyn reminds him, the best and worst thing about Hollywood is that it has a short memory.

By the end of season six, it feels like Bojack’s journey is already over. The anti-hero we have been reluctantly routing for loses everything and degenerates back into a cycle of addiction and self-loathing. He may be serving his time in prison but the people he loves will not be waiting for him on the outside. Princess Carolyn has found love, Dianne has learned it’s not her job to fix Bojack, and Hollyhock presumably wants nothing to do with him. It’s the ending Bojack deserves.

More importantly, however, Princess Carolyn and Dianne get the ending they deserve too. In “Good Damage”, Dianne navigates life on anti-depressants and has to face the fact that the book she has always wanted to write is not something she actually wants to write. Instead of forcing herself, she realizes that she can write a fun teenage detective story if she wants to and that’s ok. The damage that she has been desperately trying to make into something beautiful is a part of her and she can harness what she has learned in whatever she writes. It’s a triumphant and powerful moment.

Ultimately then, the best thing about season six of Bojack Horseman is that it isn’t entirely about Bojack. It is just as much about the people who have suffered at his hand. More than this, it is a profound social commentary on the toxicity of celebrity culture. And that is why Bojack Horseman will always be our favorite show about a depressed cartoon horse(man).

5/5

The post “Bojack Horseman” Comes to Its Bitter Conclusion appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

]]>
“Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review https://omgcheckitout.com/bojack-horseman-season-6-part-one-review/ Sat, 02 Nov 2019 12:20:13 +0000 https://omgcheckitout.com/?p=35037 The first part of the Bojack Horseman series finale has landed on Netflix and once again, the show proves itself to be the best cartoon about a depressed horse on Netflix. The final season begins with Bojack in rehab. After seasons of running away from his problems and using alcohol to forget about them, Bojack […]

The post “Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

]]>
The first part of the Bojack Horseman series finale has landed on Netflix and once again, the show proves itself to be the best cartoon about a depressed horse on Netflix.

The final season begins with Bojack in rehab. After seasons of running away from his problems and using alcohol to forget about them, Bojack finally seeks the help he desperately needs. He writes letters to Dianne, informing her of his progress. Even if his counselor is full of useless aphorisms, Bojack successfully commits to sobriety. For the first time ever on the show, we see some real character development. In spite of the comical slipups that occur along the way, the cycle of doing appalling things and self-deprecation seems to be weaning.

Meanwhile, Princess Carolyn is struggling to balance her work life with her new baby. Fittingly, her baby is a porcupine who pricks her every time she pics him up. For a while, it seems that once again, Princess Carolyn is putting her work-life before her personal life. By the end of the season, however, she too shows signs of genuine character development.

As always, the season is filled with witty animal puns and seeded irony. The show continues to heavily criticize the toxicity of Hollywood culture and in the same breath, the show turns this painful criticism in on itself. It achieves this in a way that is both devastating and brilliantly funny.

By the end of the season, Bojack seems to be transformed into a new horse. He faces up to his problems, takes responsibility for his decisions and last but not least, he gets a haircut. He apologizes to Princess Carolyn for all the liberties he has taken; he gives Dianne some helpful advice and finally, he gives Mr. Peanutbutter the crossover episode he has always wanted.

Just as we start to feel happy for Bojack, we are reminded in the cruellest way that he is not, for lack of a better word, a good person. Two new characters are introduced to the storyline as reporters looking to find out the cause of Sarah Lynn’s tragic death. We already know, of course, who is responsible. In addition, the actress Gina Cazador is a damaged woman after the trauma she endured when Bojack strangled her and at the end of the episode, we are reminded of the time Bojack got two teens drunk and left them at the hospital. This time, however, we hear the story from the victim’s point of view.

Hollyhock’s expression right before she finds out that the culprit of the story is Bojack is exactly how we felt watching the season finale. For a second there, we felt proud of Bojack for overcoming his issues and taking steps to become a better man. Any sympathy we extended to the character gets torn away as we are reminded firmly that he had done terrible things. He may be accepting responsibility for the things he has done, but the law and the public still need to hold him accountable regardless of his celebrity status. And that double-sided sword of an ending is exactly what makes Bojack Horseman so devastatingly brilliant.

5/5

The post “Bojack Horseman” Season 6, Part One: Review appeared first on OMG Check It Out !.

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