Brooklyn Nine-Nine
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Brooklyn Nine-Nine: The 19 best lines from 'Greg and Larry'
Brooklyn Nine-Nine: The 19 best lines from 'Greg and Larry'
The detectives try to take down Bob and Figgis
कीवर्ड्स: brooklyn nine-nine, season 3, 3x23, season finale, recap
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It was called Brooklyn Nine-Nine finale: The 19 best lines from Greg and Larry | EW.com
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'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' co-creator talks season finale, cliffhanger
'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' boss drops 15 hints about season finale
like we began: With Holt being kept away from his precious precinct. At the end of season 2, his nemesis, Madeline Wuntch, “promoted” him to a job in PR, where he toiled for a few episodes before returning to the Nine-Nine early this season. This time, they stuck the good captain — along with Jake — where the sun
shine: In Coral Palms, Fla. In the witness protection program. Now we’ve got so many questions, like “How long will they be there?” and “Who’s with them in Florida?” and “How annoying of a neighbor is Jake to Holt?”
With an entertaining sweep of serialized episodes to finish up the season — juiced with a cliffhanger in the tradition of past
season finales — the cop comedy has proved that it can succeed in unspooling bigger stories. Or should we say:
proving. Because the story line involving Jimmy “the Butcher” Figgis (and his FBI connections) trying to murder Detective Pimento is clearly spilling into next season. Bolstered by the return of corrupt agent and Holt clone Bob Anderson (excuse me, Bob
derson), “Greg and Larry” was a winning finale, humming right along with a string of jokes that not only plumbed the robotic, stoic anti-chemistry of Holt and Bob (see: many of the quotes below), but also brought the whole squad together and spread the laughs around, right down to Hitchcock, who helped Jake by sampling the chocolate and nope-that’s-not-chocolate smears on the hospital walls. Throw in a few fun revelations (Rosa’s apartment is beautifully appointed? Rosa’s name isn’t Rosa?) and silly side avenues (Charles’ belief in the healing power of
; Amy’s inspirational goodbye to the inmates minus the Nazi; the straightjacket hospital escape; the interrogation montage), and it all added up to superb season send-off.
I’m hopeful that we haven’t seen the last of Dennis Haysbert’s Bob, who is likely off to witness protection, too, if not prison; his dry, literal, and literary energy paired perfectly with Holt’s and elevated these last two episodes (while throwing viewers off the scent that he was the bad apple in the FBI). It worked in the way that pairing Frasier with an equally, if not more, erudite foil in Niles, rather than a fratty manchild, opened up a whole different set of jokes. My only quibble with Bob is that, while I bought into the idea of a Holt clone from the start, I wasn’t as sold on the reason for his turn to the dark side. He comes from the same strong, silent service-type stock as Holt, so working on a Mexican drug cartel case for 14 years yet getting only a commendation with his name misspelled would be a huge bummer, but it doesn’t seem that it would transform an individual like that into a murderous bad guy. That said, the pair’s “Was it worth it?” exchange involving whale meat right after that conversation made right up for it. (See: No. 2 below.) And speaking of small moments, the fleeting frustrated-with-himself look that Holt issues after he calls Jake “son” and father-figure-seeking Jake excitedly telling him there are no takebacks, is worth a rewatch or three.
Before we ponder the flurry of questions rattling around our brains this summer (Is Amy with Jake in witness protection? Is Kevin with Holt? Who will be cast as Figgis? When will Adrian re-emerge? What the hell is Rosa’s real name?), let’s make a pot of basmati rice, take off our V-necks, stay innocent, eat our disgusting candy bars, give Kevin our regards, zipline out of here like an American Ninja, ruin jazz forever, call Venus, retire to our lake houses, try not to spiral, dress up like babies, and re-live the nine best lines of “Greg and Larry.” Actually, you know what? There were so many good ones, let’s try for 19. (And for more on the
finale, read our postmortem Q&A with exec producer Dan Goor here.)
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19. “I have nothing to live for, and I drive like it.” —Hitchcock, who offers to give his fellow Nine-Nine detectives a ride
18. “I think you’d love Florida, Bob. I’ve never actually been there, but Pitbull’s videos make it seem
.” —Jake, trying to persuade Bob to cooperate with the police by offering witness protection
17. “The cancer has spread. Get your house in order.” —Holt as a child, playing doctor with his teddy bear
16. “What if something happens to Jake and he never gets to meet my baby? I don’t want to hang out with some stupid baby who’s never met Jake.” —Charles to Amy after she worries that she’ll never see him again and get to say “I love you
15. “I should have known Agent Whealon was dirty. There were signs. He wore a V-neck once.” —Bob to Holt
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