
*Episode premise spoilers, which include a major spoiler from the end of episode 7.*
Season finale! I’ve heard basically nothing about Everything Will Be Fine since shortly after it came out, so at this point, I’m guessing there’s not going to be a season 2. Which is a shame—in addition to being a great show, the finale opens the show up in really interesting new directions, and I’d love to show where they were going with it. There’s been no official cancellation, so hope springs eternal, but I’m not holding my breath.
At the end of episode 7, Andrea was brought home safely. And while Fausto read her a bedtime story, Julia and Ruy wound up kissing. Now, with Andrea in bed and the crisis behind them, all three adults celebrate her safe return in an atmosphere charged with elation, relief, and conflicted feelings.
I’m going to save the big spoilers from this episode for a separate post, but I like where the show takes things here. While it’s a big swing, I think the show does the legwork to make it work. As I said, it leaves room for a lot of interesting growth and expansion for the characters.
There’s also a large time jump in the episode—throughout the season, there have been throwaway references to the approaching pandemic, mostly as the radio or the news plays in the background, and once the dust settles from Andrea’s attempt to run away, we jump forward about a year. Now, we’ve skipped over the early months of the pandemic and reach that hopeful period when folks have gotten into the rhythm of things, looking out for themselves and each other, doing stuff remotely and wearing (cloth) masks with news of vaccines on the horizon.
This is an interesting choice as well, because it doesn’t really break down the big move following episode 7. Instead, we skip ahead and get a feeling for the characters’ new idea of normal, in terms of both the pandemic and the relationships between the characters. Not everything is spelled out easily, and while the show drops a lot of tidbits, we’re left on some level to imagine how everything has shaken out. As far as the feel and theme of the finale go, Ruy sums it up best: “It’s not about whether change is good or bad. Change merely is. It exists, period. And now, even change is changing.”
Oh, and did I mention there’s a lowkey but full-blown musical number toward the end of the episode? Another big swing—while music has been an important part of the series, it’s never been employed like this, with the major characters singing their feelings. I’m guessing I’m a little hampered here by the subtitles, which translate the lyrics in a very straightforward manner without rhyme or rhythm. Reading the translation, the song seems fairly on-the-nose and a little corny, but I don’t know how it comes off in Spanish.
On the whole, this is definitely my favorite behind-the-camera project from Diego Luna. It’s fun and messy and emotional, and the characters feel so complex and real. I love how lived-in the whole show feels, and I really like the different ideas Luna explores in the story.
Recommend?
In General – I would, as long as you don’t have issues with the content. This is an interesting, entertaining show—I’m glad that Y tu Luna también prompted me to watch it a second time.
Diego Luna – Yes. Luna’s direction is so confident and unobtrusive, quietly building the lives of these characters onscreen. And again, I’m not sure how much of a direct hand he has in the story, but I love that as well.
Warnings
Sexual content, language, drinking/smoking/drug use, scenes of violence, and thematic elements (including sexual harassment.)