Finally got around to watching up through the Christmas episode. Still can't decide if I want to binge the rest. I kind of do.
Anyway, my first thought is, I feel like Sydney is a fucking terrible chef. I'm not an amazing cook or anything, but I've
never made something and it been so bad that I had to spit it out. She did it repeatedly (think there were like 3 or 4 dishes they showed?). Salting something so hard that you can't even put it in your mouth? Fucking c'mon man.
The Marcus episode in Copenhagen was good. I really liked the Vacation homage, complete with Holiday Road and the jump cuts. Also fucking had to laugh at the baker.
As for the Christmas episode, I thought it was fantastic. First, the chaos of having people talk over each other was really well done. It's one of my complaints about "theater" in general that it's so unnatural because no one just waits for another person to finish their thought. It's very rare we get genuine conversation flow. I will also say that it was mostly centered around their mom, and most of that in the first 5-10 minutes. After that it settled down pretty well. It wasn't any more chaotic than the season 1 single shot episode. Stressful, for sure, but that's this show in general.
I've got the disagree with it not serving a major story purpose, too. It was a clinic on character development. Richie is a much more caring, kind person. He'd do anything for his now ex-wife. He also talks about how he feels like he's wasting his life at The Beef and is looking for any way out. We see that the substance abuse and depression are hereditary (not that this is a surprise, as I think it is most of the time). Mikey loves his brother and it crushes him to have to push him away from what he knows is a shit situation so Carm can flourish. Natalie is shown as someone who wants a parental figure and is constantly shoved aside for the other children. Considering she's pregnant, it makes it so her worries about it are magnified. Her husband is still a fuck up. It demonstrates
why Carm decided to leave Chicago. His family is insane. It also shows us that he's been in love with Claire since high school (hinted at previously in their conversations, but really hammers it). There was also the connection to Copenhagen and it explains why Marcus is staying where he is on the boat. It also shows how close Jimmy is with the family, and even though he seems like a cutthroat, still has a soft spot (giving Richie a job even when he should've told him to fuck off).
The performances were also superb. Literally everyone was great in it. From Jamie Lee Curtis and Bob Odenkirk, to Gillian Jacobs and Sarah Paulson, and even John Mulaney and Matty Matheson's brother. There wasn't a bad performance to be seen. Not even a middling one.
Finally, the ending splash of "The Berzatto's" was just perfect to close it out.