"Bolognese" is the eighth episode of the second season of the American television comedy-drama series The Bear. It is the 16th overall episode of the series and was written by co-executive producer Rene Gube, and directed by series creator Christopher Storer. It was released on Hulu on June 22, 2023, along with the rest of the season.
The series follows Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto, an award-winning New York City chef de cuisine, who returns to his hometown of Chicago to run his late brother Michael's failing Italian beef sandwich shop. In the episode, The Bear prepares for a fire suppression exam, which will decide if the restaurant will be allowed to open.
The episode received highly positive reviews from critics, who praised the tension and performances.
Plot
With two weeks to go before the opening, The Bear prepares for a fire suppression exam. Ebraheim (Edwin Lee Gibson) returns and apologizes to Tina (Liza Colón-Zayas) for his absence. Ebraheim then decides to take over the restaurant's takeout sandwich window, helping Tina in focusing in her other duties.
Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) tells Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) that he decided to change part of the menu after consulting it with Claire (Molly Gordon), leaving her worried over her impact in Carmy's life. Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) returns, now wearing suits and apologizing to Natalie (Abby Elliott) for his behavior. He then helps her in interviewing front-of-house candidates, with Richie challenging the candidates into seeing their commitment to perfection. Marcus (Lionel Boyce) has also returned, and used his knowledge from Copenhagen to be more creative with the meals.
Fak (Matty Matheson), who has been trying to figure out why the restaurant keeps failing the fire suppression system test, has a last-minute epiphany just before the inspector comes that Mikey disabled it when he tried to commit insurance fraud by burning down the restaurant, and quickly fixes it in time. The inspector tests the system in front of everyone, and despite their concerns, he certifies the system as effective, allowing them to finally open the restaurant. As the staff prepares for the final arrangements, Carmy leaves. Now calling Claire his girlfriend, Carmy decides to make her dinner for the first time.
Context
Carmy's apartment kitchen is stocked with a restaurant-quantity roll of cling-wrap, Tums antacid, a bundle of dried thyme hanging above the sink, apple cider vinegar, and copies of Mugaritz and El Bulli cookbooks, both of which are restaurants in Spain known for their molecular gastronomy.[1][2]
Claire and Carmy discuss the idiom waiting for the other shoe to drop, and Claire says "Nobody's keeping track of shoes," but the basis of the idiom is that someone is awaiting a most-likely-negative second part of a two-part scenario.[3]
Elwood: "It's 106 miles to Chicago, we got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark, and we're wearing sunglasses." Jake: "Hit it."
Richie and Carmy quote The Blues Brothers to each other.[4] Filmed on location in Chicago, The Blues Brothers is a landmark American comedy, in which two musicians fight Illinois Nazis while trying to get their band back together and save an orphanage.[5]
When Richie comes into the office to apologize to Nat, one of the books visible on the bookshelf is Ridley Scott: A Retrospective, a coffee table book that he presumably put there as a replacement/placeholder for Carmy's copy of Will Guidara's Unreasonable Hospitality, which he was reading in "Forks."[6][7]
"Francie Fak? No, she can go fuck, my love." "Is it 'cause of the thing or like...?" "What do you think? Use your brain, babe." "'Is it because of the thing?'" "No gavones at Friends and Family!"
A gavone is a greedy person who takes more than their share.[8] According to another source, gavones is a derogatory slur for an Italian person.[9] His exclamation ma que bella! in response to preggo Nat translates to "that's beautiful" (lit.'but how beautiful'). Ebon Moss-Bachrach picked up gavones from a "Teamster driver he met on a long-ago movie."[10] The two go out for martinis and "meatball salad," and Ebon "peppers his buddy for slang that Richie might use. 'What's the word for somebody who's greedy, who likes to eat a lot?' 'Oh, that's a gavone.'"[10]
Chicago artist Denise Dietz did the "Sistine Chapel" drawings of proposed dishes that Carmy made to show Syd.[11][12][13]
Tardivo, formally tardivo di Treviso, is prized Italian variety of radicchio.[14]
On the train home, Sydney is watching footage of a 2001 NCAA men's semifinal game between Duke University and the University of Maryland.[15]Duke men's basketball, coached by Coach K, author of the Leading from the Heart book Syd's dad gave her, came from behind in the last minute of the game to push the game to overtime and ultimately win.[16] The game, considered one of the greatest comebacks in American sports history,[17] is known as the Miracle Minute game, which ties to the show's ongoing "every second counts" motif.[15]
Production
Development
In May 2023, Hulu confirmed that the eighth episode of the season would be titled "Bolognese", and was to be written by co-executive producer Rene Gube, and directed by series creator Christopher Storer.[18] It was Gube's second writing credit, and Storer's tenth directing credit.[19]
Costuming
Richie returns the Bear wearing suits, specifically a wool suit from designer Hugo Boss.[20] Ebon Moss-Bachrach and costume designer Courtney Wheeler collaborated on the selection; Moss-Bachrach thought "Richie would emulate Al Pacino's intense, monochrome-clad Vincent Hanna from 1995's Heat, based on a real Chicago heist. Wheeler imagined that Richie wanted to re-create his inspiring stagiaire aesthetic, plus the all-black serendipitously coordinated with The Bear's decor."[20] Wheeler intentionally did not tailor the suit further "because Richie wouldn't have."[20] The look is "isn't a slim fit, but a little more old-timey...the black shirt has some subtle stripes to it that almost even look sparkly."[21]
According to Wheeler, "Even though it's a blink-and-you-miss-it moment, we did have Carmy in a pair of sick broken-in 1950s Levi's we got from Knee Deep in Chicago during his scene at home with Claire."[24]
Set decoration and production design
Blueprint of the renovated Bear restaurant
Cinematographer Andrew Wehde and production designer Merje Veski collaborated closely on the construction of the restaurant set.[25] According to Wehde, "We'd spend all day with blueprints and lighting diagrams, thinking about every specific light."[25] The resulting is now "controlled through a rigging board with high CRI and colour-adjustable, LED-based lights."[25]
The Bear crew can begin cooking in the restaurant again after passing the fire suppression test. Carmy immediately makes a steak in the newly opened kitchen, and then goes home to make a ground-beef bolognese sauce and fresh spaghetti for Claire. Among the new pieces of equipment are a double Blodgett oven.[26] The newly delivered stainless steel cookware is manufactured by All-Clad.[27]
After work, Carmy goes to the grocery store to buy a shallot for a bucatini dinner for Claire.[29] Bucatini is a long, hollow pasta noodle has been described as a cross between ziti and spaghetti, which "favorite among chefs and noodle aficionados. Whereas other long pastas get coated in sauce, bucatini gets both coated and filled with sauce so the flavors have a chance to fully soak into each strand".[30] He makes a bolognese sauce, which one writer described as "simple, but the flavor comes from letting it simmer and taking the time," commenting "there is no doubt in our mind that Carmen Berzatto would whip you up with one of the best bolognese sauces you've had in your life—especially if he was falling in love with you".[31]
Critical reviews
"Bolognese" received highly positive reviews from critics. Marah Eakin of Vulture gave the episode a 4 star out of 5 rating and wrote, "He's showing her he cares in the way he best knows how, and she rewards him with a hug and a kiss. At this point, if these two ran off and got married, I wouldn't be mad. They seem endgame already — even if Carmy didn't know if she was his girlfriend."[32]
A.J. Daulerio of Decider wrote, "The Bear is officially a restaurant. To celebrate, Carmy goes over to Claire's apartment and finally makes his girlfriend dinner."[33] Arnav Srivastava of The Review Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I thought the dynamics of this episode were a little bit off due to it being centred around the test. Anyway, the path to the final two episodes is now clear and the opening of The Bear seems like a real possibility."[34] Karl R De Mesa from Show Snob wrote, "With everything cleared for their soft opening, it's time they got down to finalizing their menu. Can't wait for friends and family night."[35]
Rafa Boladeras of MovieWeb named the episode as the eighth best of the season, writing "The episode delivers, as the moment of the test feels for audiences like a Hail Mary pass, or a love declaration, or the big final battle, creating expectations and tension while also being a scary moment."[36] Jasmine Blu of TV Fanatic named the episode as the seventh best of the season, writing "The stakes were fairly high in this installment, with The Bear needing to pass the Fire Suppression test if they hoped even to get the restaurant going in time. It was their last shot at it, but since we could've envisioned they'd make it through, it wasn't as nerve-wracking as other plot points throughout the season."[37]
Retrospective reviews
In 2024, The Hollywood Reporter placed "Bolognese" at 26 on a ranked list of 28 episodes produced to that point, commenting that it primarily serves "to set up the final stretch of season two."[38] ScreenRant ranked "Bolognese" 13th out of the 28 episodes produced through the end of season three, commenting that "while the fire inspection was what drove the tension and drama into the episode, what really made it shine was Carmy seeming to find love and leaving work early to make Claire dinner at home."[39]
In 2025, Vulture ranked "Bolognese" as 33rd-best out of 38 episodes of The Bear, describing it as "perfectly acceptable."[40]
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