"Six Feet Under" The Last Time (TV Episode 2002) Poster

(TV Series)

(2002)

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9/10
End of Season, New Destinies
claudio_carvalho26 October 2006
Ruth takes lots of picture of Maya and shows to the family in the breakfast, upsetting Nate, and he visits Aaron Buchbinder, who is agonizing and finally dies. There is an inspection of DCA in Fisher's Funeral Service, and they are severely fined. Rico buys 25% of the society for US$ 75,000.00 and saves their business. Claire goes to the LAC-Arts for interview, and she recalls the death of her father and cries. Taylor moves to her grandparents house, because Keith is suspended. Brenda faces that she is sexually addicted and goes to therapy. Nate has a bleed and needs an emergency cranial surgery, and he goes with his mother to visit the baby, and he finally tells her about his surgery. Ruth quits the job in Nikolai's shop. Claire has a conversation with Nate, and he visits Brenda. Ruth goes with him to the hospital, and Claire and David do not go to her graduation going also to the hospital.

This episode has some very emotional scenes: the touching visit of Nate to Aaron; the funny dream of Claire while waiting for her interview and her further reaction; the happiness of Rico when he joins the society of the Fisher's brothers; the conversation of Brenda and Nate; and Nate crying on the lap of his mother. My vote is nine.

Title (Brazil): "A Última Vez" ("The Last Time")
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10/10
One of the best ever
shaww0110 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
(essay warning omg) genuinely amazing, best episode i've seen since finishing monster. Ts was an assault on my emotions. Ts should not be legal. I was either tearing up or about to tear up for the entire last half. Maybe im overrating but t20 oat methinks. I literally stopped watching tv for 4 days just to get over ts.

(SPOILERS)

it's genuinely taken me a few days to decide how i should start this paragraph. Idk bro. This was just so personal and intimate, the uniting factor of major life events / changes caused this to be one of the most emotional and cathartic episodes i've ever seen. I absolutely loved how, similar to that one 3x9, the writers used nate's possible death as a way to bring the family together. This led to a mix of happy and sad scenes in the final half of this episode that would also lead to me sitting absolutely motionless, not breathing or blinking, for thirty minutes, watching every member of the family interact. Seeing david + claire smoke pot together, and nate + claire talk about relationships could have easily been in any other episode, but the context surrounding it here made it so beautiful and cathartic to watch. The way the characters avoided nate's issue, as if their not talking about it prevents it................. i don't know how to write the next sentence bro. Trying to enjoy your life during a scary time is something everyone universally understands and those few scenes absolutely exploit that, ESPECIALLY with the family aspect this show comes with. Absolutely everyone has lost a family pet, a close relative, etc and has had to have multiple conversations with their family that dodge the topic on everyone's minds. Those scenes genuinely hit so deeply on my first watch.

The other scenes that are used to unite the family are painfully depressing. Nate creates his pre-need with david. Nate confesses to ruth about his condition. Most notably, nate cries in his moms arms, sobbing about how he doesn't want to die. That scene took me out bro. My eyes were not dry from that scene forward. As much as nate has genuinely hated his life this season, the realization that he won't get to see his mom again, that he hasn't been appreciating his mom despite how much she cares for him, and that his mom thinks she hasn't loved him good enough is enough to snap him out of the dissociative lifestyle he's held since his diagnosis in the season one finale. He finally wants to live, and he's possibly about to die.

Then we get into the best scene of the show so far, an absolute beautiful full-circle for nate's arc.

In the final scene of 1x1, nate sees a vision of his dad waving at him in the same bus that killed him. It drives away. Realizing something, he stands there, in the middle of the sidewalk, watching person after person walk around him. To me, it literally refers to the fact that he's allowed everybody to pass him by, due to the way it lines up with the story and the way the scene is shot, showing nate standing still in a crowd of people, giving no reaction. It's very well known that nate was a very distant son to his parents and siblings, so the idea of him realizing that he's wasted his life, getting the realization due to his fathers death, makes complete sense.

And so, from that moment forward, he starts living, and rekindling the previously lost relationships with his family. Season one spends the next twelve episodes letting nate live: he bonds with his family, his relationship with brenda becomes serious, and he finds purpose working with david, helping those in grief. But still, due to his diagnosis, he slowly sinks back throughout season 2, back into his original autopilot mindset.

In the final scene of this episode, wearing the same sweat and clothes, nate himself stands in front of the bus, its doors beckoning him to enter, no longer being an outsider looking in on death. Now that he's truly realized from talking with ruth that he needs to live his life, that he should have been living his life, he's forced to step on the bus himself. He was already given his chance to live, and he wastes it at the end. Understanding his mistake, he sits in his hospital bed, staring at death. In the final shot, we watch from a distance, the same way nate did, as if the episode is asking what we're going to do.

EXTRA NOTES:
  • nate not getting on the bus and instead only standing outside hopefully implies that he won't be taking his fathers place yet.


  • the fact that nate nearly dies in the car crash with brenda in 1x13 shows that not only was nate given an opportunity to understand that he needs to live his life, but he was also given an opportunity to live PERIOD.


  • this finale and my interpretation of it makes his character in season one much more interesting and layered for me, removing my biggest issue with an already great season.


/////////////

there are very few episodes i've seen so perfectly express that the greatest horror in life comes from realizing you have wasted it / been living meaninglessly. 4x11 of bojack horseman did it very well, and 4x10 of succession touches on it, but this absolutely does it the best. The awe i felt when this episode faded to white is something i genuinely cannot express. Best episode i've seen since monster x74, top 20 oat for me.

SERIALZD: shaww.
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Season 2: Improves the plotting and expands the characters to be stronger than the strong first season (suggestive SPOILERS)
bob the moo18 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
It was not too long ago that I rewatched the first season of this show for the first time in about a decade and I enjoyed getting to know these characters again even though at times I thought that some of it got close to platitude in the writing and that the plots were not always that strong. The second season sort of continues in the same vein because it does require a lot of stuff to be happening in the lives of the characters; and not just a lot of stuff but a lot of stuff that is of consequence whether it is having a boyfriend that shoots someone (two characters), paying off mobsters, fathering a child, having a sex addiction or having a life-threatening condition. All of these things occur among many others and at times it can still seem that a lot of if may not work. This is not the case though because the show manages to build all of this off the characters much more than it did in the first season (and it did it pretty well in the first season).

As a result I go with all of it because the characters work and the scenarios make sense in the context of their lives. Everything is build up and developed well and I didn't question too much simply because a lot of it did make perfect sense and had a flow to it without the narrative. It is hard to describe but i have seen many shows where plots seem to move for the sake of keeping things going whereas here they happen because that is the way life and death works – it can be random and unplanned but in the end you need to try and deal with stuff and yourself the best you can. The writing captures that really well and it manages to avoid the trap of being cloying almost completely this season – indeed sentimentality is almost completely out here in favour of brutal honesty – not always fun to watch but always engaging and honest.

The performances match the material and are strong across the board. Ruth may not technically be the lead character since the writing suggest that Nate is as he is our eyes into this world as the returning character, however Conroy makes her be such a strong and fascinating character that one cannot help but love her. Krause is nearly as strong and has similar demons within himself as well as those within others. Hall is very assured throughout while Ambrose, Rodriguez and Patrick have good performances despite their characters being a little more obvious. Griffiths does well to sell her character's decline convincingly while the various supporting turns are good in smaller roles.

This is not to suggest that it all works perfectly or that it always avoids a feeling of excess outside of the bounds of normal life, but it does have these things but makes them work because of how well written the characters and scenarios are. Engaging and moving throughout – it is very pleasing to return to a show more than decade older and find that it is just as good as you remember it.
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