In the third season of βThe Bearβ we realize how aptly named the Emmy-winning series is.
A beast for everyone involved, the restaurant Carmy and Sydney opened at the end of the second season has become an ever-looming presence.
Determined to set standards he met underΒ other chefs, the perfectionist makes a list of βnon-negotiablesβ that seems a bit too severe: different menus every day, beautiful plating, peak performance from everyone.
Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) gets pushback, but the others realize he has something to prove.
At the end of the second season of "The Bear," Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) and Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) made plans for their restaurant. Now, in the third season, they're dealing with growing pains.
To understand the stakes, creator Christopher Storer uses many flashback episodes to fill in the blanks β about Carmyβs training, the restaurantβs beef days, the Berzatto familyβs skeletons.
An episode focused on Tina (Liza Colon-Zayas), the tough-talking line cook, is among the seasonβs best. It points up the differences within the kitchen and gives Colon-Zayas a beautiful showcase. Directed by Ayo Edebiri (who plays Sydney), it shows what sacrifices she has made and how far she has come. Colon-Zayas and Edebiri nail it.
Carmyβs time under those Michelin-starred chefs explains his drive. He was pushed just the way heβs pushing this businessβs personnel. The cryptic cellphone photos make sense; the loss of a favored restaurant resonates.
Ayo Edebiri, right, directs Liza Colon-Zayas in an episode of season three of "The Bear."Β
Naturally, Richie (the always-good Ebon Moss-Bachrach) is the first to pop under the new world order. Even though he adapted to the switch from sandwich shop to fine dining, he still has a tipping point. The initial argument is classic β and should make the term βnon-negotiableβ as prominent as βyes, chefβ and βhands.β
While Storer makes sure fansβ favorite guest stars get at least a cameo in the third season, his real strength is in pushing the regulars. Marcus (Lionel Boyce), the restaurantβs pastry chef, studies his bossβs past and gets a different take on what makes Carmy run. He also has a tear-jerking moment at a funeral that should be a template for eulogies everywhere.
Moving into Chicago more than he has in the past, Storer shows workers in other professions rolling through their days. Equally as stressful, they put the restaurant business in perspective and, yes, build to that all-important visit from a food critic.
Neil (Matty Matheson) is so intent on spotting who might be there to review he creates a βcode redβ and increases the pressure.
Jeremy Allen White in "The Bear"Β
Comfortably settled into its run, βThe Bearβ isnβt satisfied with playing out the cards. Like Carmy (who, by the way, is still highly watchable and manic), it doesnβt just ride out a day. It makes something as simple as paper towels a crisis for everyone.
To demonstrate just how different the restaurant now is, cinematographers linger on the food while White arranges elements with precision. It looks delicious (and makes you want to visit the place).
While bills mount, a pregnant Natalie (Abby Elliott), who handles the business side of things, feels the pressure. She, too, wants Carmyβs dream to transpire β it just might come with an awfully high price tag.
Because FX on Hulu is releasing all of the episodes on one day, you should book vacation and binge. These are "The Bear's" potato chip years; you just canβt savor one episode at a time.
βThe Bearβ is addictive.
βThe Bearβ premieres June 27 on Hulu.
Jeremy Allen White and Ebon Moss-Bachrach star in "The Bear," which leads television nominees with five.



