“Forks” was the episode during which Richie’s potential was realized, however his scenes since that powerhouse half-hour have been a combination of bottled-up anxiousness and fast retorts to those that have extra vital issues to do, each within the restaurant and outdoors of it. Richie’s story requested us loads of questions, nevertheless it not often supplied the solutions we had been in search of all through season 3.
Very like the sequence did for lots of its ambiguous plot traces in season 4, The Bear(*4*) gave Richie the requisite time to work by way of his previous and look to the current with higher focus. Richie’s ex-wife’s wedding ceremony is a fundamental focus all through the primary seven episodes, culminating in a therapeutic marital super-event with practically each character that has ever been concerned within the Berzatto household’s internal circle.
Richie nonetheless loves Tiff (Gillian Jacobs), however generally that isn’t sufficient to make a relationship work. Seeing Richie help his former companion and encourage her to seek out happiness in a brand new marriage was a mature and completely satisfying improvement for Richie. The scene during which he tries to assist Tiff’s groom, Frank (Josh Hartnett), discover frequent floor together with his personal daughter elevates the character right into a grown grownup. Richie usually behaves like a child, whether or not or not it’s yelling when he doesn’t agree with somebody or undermining Carmy for a petty or resentful motive. He doesn’t need to see one other man steal his little one, however he can let go as a result of he’s far more safe in himself than he was again in season 1 and even season 2.
Richie’s development into one of many fundamental cogs within the restaurant has coincided together with his potential to look inward and take pleasure in his personal progress. He has confidence in himself now, and he’s an ideal encapsulation of how a person can use shallowness to deal with himself and others with the respect they deserve. However regardless of how far Richie has come, his relationship with Carmy was nonetheless holding him again heading into the season 4 finale.
“Goodbye” is an effective episode for the primary half of its runtime, however the second Richie comes out to the again of the restaurant to seek out out that Carmy is leaving the Bear, is when the finale explodes into one thing actually memorable. A lot has gone unsaid between these two of their love-hate interactions for the previous couple of seasons. They normally determine to only keep silent for the sake of not screaming their heads off, however an admission from Carmy that he attended Mikey’s funeral is sufficient to each damage after which heal one thing deep inside Richie’s soul.
Richie feels every little thing and wears so many feelings on his face (that is true of lots of the characters, however probably the most so with him). Moss-Bachrach lets us inside Richie’s rainbow of feelings by swearing his allegiance to Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) on the finish of the scene. He forgives Carmy for his previous sins, but additionally is ready to slay that dragon in his thoughts as a result of he’s been free of Carmy’s shadow. Richie is a follower, however now he can lead in his personal approach with out Carmy commanding him or lording over the enterprise.