
*Spoilers from episode 5*
Hoo boy. Okay, we’re at the season finale. Big, big developments going on here, maybe too much to wrap up all at once. While Joel Fry’s performance is as wonderful as always, I do think Daniel’s story gets shortchanged amid everything else going on.
So, spoilers from the last episode. At Izzy’s ultrasound, she and Steve found out she was further along than she thought. This means her ex-boyfriend Janis, not Steve, is the father of her baby. Steve is still determined to be there for her and the baby, though, and he proposes. Oh my god…
A coach bus has brought the wedding party and guests out to a fancy old manor house in the country. (Izzy isn’t really showing yet, so this is all very quick.) Steve and Izzy both have their own separate freakouts, and Alice is on the verge of spontaneous combustion.
I won’t get into too many details to avoid spoiling things, so I’ll keep my thoughts a little more general here. Not surprisingly, Alice is handling none of this well, and she’s not shy about showing it. The rehearsal dinner is a disaster, though only partially because of her. For part of the episode, Steve is convinced that she’s trying to murder him, with Alice not doing much to assuage his concerns on that front.
Everything gets very twisty-turny, and while there are some hints toward where a resolution might be heading, we don’t actually arrive there. That’s because of a big third-act crisis that throws everything else into stark relief. Rather than seeing how things turn out, we end on an all-but-literal cliffhanger. I’m still deciding how I feel about the ending, which isn’t fully satisfying where the narrative is concerned but might still be cathartic in its own way. I haven’t wrapped my mind all the way around it yet.
Our last character of the week is Eilidh Fisher as Rome, the person Dom has been dating. They’re a gentle nerd, and the two characters are cute together. Here, Rome offers comfort to Dom as the pre-wedding festivities highlight the train wreck that his family has rapidly become.
When episode 5 ended with the proposal, I suspected that the finale likely wouldn’t have enough time to devote much to Daniel, and I was right. Given that it’s his daughter’s wedding, he’s around for plenty of it, and there are some good moments for his character, but his story isn’t really dealt with. None of the stuff from episodes 3 and 4 about his sexual needs are mentioned at all, and while there’s a hint toward what his resolution may be with Alice, it feels too simplistic for everything that’s gone down between them during the series.
But even if he doesn’t get much in the way of his ongoing story, there are still some strong scenes for Daniel in this episode, and as Joel Fry has done time and again in so many supporting roles, he doesn’t waste a single opportunity.
Daniel has brought Marni as a guest to the wedding, which obviously turns heads. When she’s apprehensive about being there, Daniel firmly tells her, “Seriously, [Alice] took her best friend to every single event for our entire marriage. It's my daughter's wedding, and I can invite my best friend if I want to.” So sweet! I also enjoy a soft moment the two of them share on the grounds of the manor house, and when the crisis hits, Daniel proves both brave and proactive. My favorite part, though, comes during the rehearsal dinner. As things start spiralling out of control, Alice is predictably focused on herself while Daniel’s primary concern is Izzy. There’s a fantastic bit when he steps in to give Izzy some breathing room at a point where she’s clearly distressed and Steve is just making things worse. Throughout the series, it’s been really lovely to see how Daniel looks out for her amid all the chaos and drama that’s erupted.
So that’s Alice and Steve! Is it the end? I’m guessing so—renewal doesn’t seem all that likely to me, but who knows? Personally, I'm so curious for more of Daniel's story! But for now, I’ll sign off with my final thoughts on the show.
Accent Watch
Southern British English.
Recommend?
In General – Ultimately, I think I would, providing you can handle the troubling subject matter and the strong secondhand-discomfort factor at times. It’s certainly not the most enjoyable show, considering how vicious some of the characters can be, but it’s a compelling one.
Joel Fry – 100%, yes! I’m finding that, if the role gives him basically anything to work with, Fry always gives you a performance worth watching, and he turns in fantastic work on this show.
Warnings
Strong thematic elements (including a troubling age-gap relationship setup,) sexual content, language, drinking/smoking/drug use, a bloody injury, and the general ick of messy people being their worst selves.

