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Children (The Bear)

"Children" is the fifth episode of the third season of the American television comedy-drama The Bear. It is the 23rd overall episode of the series and was written and directed by series creator Christopher Storer. It was released on Hulu on June 26, 2024, along with the rest of the season.

Plot
Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) helps Marcus (Lionel Boyce) in clearing out his mother's house. Chef Will Guidara, co-founder of Eleven Madison Park, where Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) once worked in New York, shares a news article reporting that Chef Terry has announced the closure of Ever after a dozen years. To help the restaurant, Cicero (Oliver Platt) brings in a friend, Nicholas "The Computer" Marshall (Brian Koppelman), an accountant, to check on the costs and offer some possible cuts. The Computer suggests reducing the amount of meals while also adding one more day to the restaurant's schedule. He and Cicero also state that another possible way to cut costs is to fire Marcus, as the restaurant does not really need a pastry chef. Natalie (Abby Elliott) immediately shuts down the suggestion. With just one hour before the Chicago Tribune reporter shows up to photograph the restaurant for the review, the team must quickly organize. Fak (Matty Matheson) and Theodore (Ricky Staffieri) are joined by their brother Sammy (John Cena) as they buff the floors. Sammy gets into an argument with Theodore for stealing his SD cards, and Richie tries to get the brothers under control. When the photographer arrives, the staff struggle to prepare a duck dish mentioned in the review, whose ingredients they do not have on hand due to the daily menu changes. Carmy goes to the basement, where he opens a box containing a notebook. It includes photos of Donna and Michael, Donna, and a baby Sugar, and a close up of young Carmy watching curiously. == Timeline ==
Timeline
The preceding episode, "Violet," took place during the first week of July 2023. There has been a leap forward to the last week of July or thereabouts, because Will Guidara texts Carmy, "Funeral dinner next week," and the Ever funeral dinner is held on Sunday, August 6, 2023. == Context ==
Context
• The song "Dream Little One, Dream" is from the 1955 black-and-white American-rural-gothic horror film Night of the Hunter. The Criterion Collection describes The Night of the Hunter as a "horror movie with qualities of a Grimm fairy tale." The film was directed by Charles Laughton and stars Robert Mitchum as a murderer masquerading as preacher, in an attempt to rob children of a hidden trove of cash. Mitchum's character, ex-con Preacher Harry Powell, has LOVE and HATE tattooed above his knuckles, Laughton's film "sides...totally with the little ones." Film critic Pauline Kael argued that it is "one of the most frightening movies ever made." Carmy is muttering to himself, disgruntled, while he performs this task, leaving the A.V. Club recapper to comment, "This guy truly is both God and Satan to his own Job." Guidara and his wife Christina Tosi also appear as themselves in the season-three finale, "Forever." ==Production==
Production
Development In May 2024, Hulu confirmed that the fifth episode of the season would be titled "Children", and was to be written and directed by series creator Christopher Storer. It was Storer's 12th writing credit and 16th directing credit. Casting The episode features a guest appearance by John Cena, who plays Sammy Fak. According to Matty Matheson, "He was a pro. Showed up, didn't even look at a script, just was fully prepared. Genuinely very inspiring, like, that's how I want to show up on another set." Costuming During her conversation with Marcus on the steps of his mom's house, Sydney is wearing a Haiks denim jacket with a "contrast collar," paired with her white Carhartt overalls last seen in "Beef." Set decoration The Fak brothers talk about their family history of setting up "fake LLCs" (shell companies) in the espresso vestibule. Their espresso machine is a "two-group Rosito Bisani Synchro, a semi-automatic espresso machine." Filming According to cinematographer Andrew Wehde, the opening scenes were shot with intent of conveying Natalie Berzatto's internal emotional state to the viewer: "You start off with Sugar in the church, and you have that beautiful light coming from behind her, which goes to her waking up and the silhouette in the kitchen and all the blue. It's like we're doing these vignettes of their inner lives." Music Songs featured on the soundtrack of the episode include "Dream Little One, Dream" by Walter Schumann and Charles Laughton, "Purple Heather" by Van Morrison, the Eddie Vedder cover of "Save It for Later," and "Mixed Emotions" by the Rolling Stones. "Mixed Emotions" was also used in the two-minute trailer for The Bear season three. Color key: • = opening credits • = lyrics captioned • = diagetic (music audible to characters in-universe) • = closing credits == Food ==
Food
• Carmy is working on something garnished with a baby turnip, served over a béarnaise sauce. Syd is underwhelmed by the sauce, which she finds "like 2014 or something". • The restaurant is serving gnocchi with beef cheeks that day. ==Critical reviews==
Critical reviews
Jenna Scherer of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B–" grade and wrote, "I've gone on record as a hardcore stan of the Fak bros. This season in particular, Neil and Ted have been adding much-needed belly laughs to even the most serious, somber episodes. But in this installmentand I really hate to say itI officially hit the upper limit of my Fak tolerance." Marah Eakin of Vulture gave the episode a 2 star out of 5 rating and wrote, "When you see Carmy digging through a box of photos in the basement labeled “DD,” you just know something's coming soon in the pipeline." A.J. Daulerio of Decider wrote, "This show is fully capable and, at times, excellent at showing the dark tunnels grief can create. And it's not just grief for the deadit's the grief for the living that can feel the most impossible, the most volatile." Brady Langmann of Esquire wrote, "I'm not ready for Sydney to split from Carmy. Really, all I want is to see season 1 of Matter of Fak drop before the next episodes of The Bear." Critics reacted negatively to John Cena's guest appearance. The Washington Post considered his appearance "distracting" arguing that "Wrestling fans like me will always be distracted by seeing the 16-time world champion on the screen, particularly when his character is so very, very Cena-like", while Ben Travers of IndieWire wrote, "Cena is just...too polished for this clan of charmingly schlubby Chicagoans." Vulture wrote, "there was never a moment when he was onscreen in this episode that I believed that was Sammy Fak." == Retrospective reviews ==
Retrospective reviews
In 2024, The Hollywood Reporter placed "Children" at 11 on a ranked list of 28 episodes produced to that point, in part due to its successful introduction of Koppelman as the Computer. Screen Rant ranked "Children" 22nd out of the 28 episodes produced through the end of season three. In 2025, Vulture ranked "Children" as 36th-best out of 38 episodes of The Bear, commenting, "The Bear has almost always been able to make great use of its guest stars, from recurring figures like Jon Bernthal and Jamie Lee Curtis to occasional surprise players like Bob Odenkirk and Brie Larson. The lone exception is what it did with John Cena in season three's 'Children.'" == See also ==
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