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After four deliciously decadent seasons, the subtly brilliant Penn Badgley (his darkly comic voiceover is perfection) hangs it up as a serial killer who’s only dangerous when he’s in love. Given its viral appeal—even Taylor Swift is a fan—this binge-able addiction is way too good for goodbyes.
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This season of You took a risk by moving its tried-and-true narrative in a new direction – and it works. Season 4 of You is bold and unexpected with twists and turns that are simply wicked. Joe Goldberg has managed to conquer an ever-increasingly challenging feat in Season 4 – he finds a way to shock us once again.
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Because for all its wildness, the series remains fascinating not just as a character study, but what this character in particular tells us about our favorite stories, about the way we as a culture look at the line between love and obsession. The final word on that matter doesn’t feel like it’s been written yet.
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You Season 4 takes Joe to an unexpected setting and places him in the midst of a murder mystery with a strong new supporting cast, creating an exciting and complex two-part season.
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Despite the extremely self-aware shift to this genre (no thanks to Badgley’s staple voiceovers), the essence of what enraptured audiences. It’s just as macabre, sexy, and absurd as ever.
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You has always been a series that's terribly addictive to watch but this time round, the classic murder-mystery spin has restored faith in a drama that could have easily continued with many of the seen-before tropes. The result? A season that may very well be more enjoyable than those before it.
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The show is and always has been an incredibly well-acted soap, buoyed by Badgley’s excellent lead performance, and its continued commitment to taking things to crazier places than it ever has makes it more than worth your while.
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Ritchie is excellent as the cold, biting art dealer – the move away from British sitcoms suits her – while Joe’s uncharacteristic vulnerability gives Badgley’s sinister voice-over a new edge. Both elevate middling material to a level of maturity the story doesn’t always demand, turning what could be one of the most unwatchable series on TV to one of the most gripping.
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It becomes clear that both Joe and Kate are beginning to recognize pieces of themselves in one another. It’s in that unexpected connection where some of the season’s most fascinating work lies.
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Seeing Joe scrambling and utterly in the dark does make for a nice change of pace after three seasons of watching him direct the lives (and deaths) of so many people. But it also uncomfortably positions him in the role of a victim in ways that the show doesn’t seem particularly eager or capable of looking at too closely.
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The show is at its sharpest and best when it gives Joe’s phony attempts at the personal transformation a rest and instead lays bare the injustice, cruelty, and, yes, campiness and dark comedy of the world.
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Honestly, You only seems to be having more fun with age and has never been as laugh-out-loud funny as it is in Season 4. Penn Badgley's performance, both on screen and through his spot-on voice-overs, continues to anchor the show.
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None of the new cast clears the Shalita Grant bar for “You” ensemble excellence, but there are a few standouts in the parade of sparkly privilege, like Tilly Keeper and Lukas Gage.
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The first five episodes are entertaining but mostly serve as an exposition-heavy launchpad for the second half of season four, which arrives on March 9. Hopefully, those last five eps pay off.
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Season 4 just doesn't feel quite as sharp as its previous seasons. ... It doesn't help that the "eat the rich" subgenre has been done and redone on TV and film lately, much better than "You" manages here, at least in the first part of the season.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 4 out of 8
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Mixed: 3 out of 8
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Negative: 1 out of 8
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Aug 20, 2023
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May 14, 2023it is not terrible, it was not that great either, had some hits and misses, compared to past seasons this is by far the most boring.
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May 7, 2023This review contains spoilers, click full review link to view.