Brooklyn Nine-Nine on Netflix: How does the funniest detective series end?

Brooklyn Nine-Nine on Netflix: How does the funniest detective series end?

Ten little episodes and then it’s gone. After eight seasons of good and faithful service, the Brooklyn 99 brigade will say goodbye to the American small screen on September 16, 2021. Already available on Canal +, the final season of the series will be released on August 13 on Netflix. With a happy and rather successful ending, Michael Schur and his teams wanted to pay homage to these characters who have been teasing us for years.

In the two-part finale, Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg) decides to take advantage of their famous annual heist to announce to the entire team that he’s leaving ’99. The cop proves his maturity here by choosing to raise his son and let him. Amy (Melissa Fumero) focuses on her career. The latter was elected to reform the police force and left the police department. Holt (Andre Brauer) too, who was promoted to general manager.

Jack’s plan is simple: during the heist, he will offer each of his friends a box containing not a grand championship trophy, but a souvenir of their past moments. But now he didn’t expect that Holt and Amy were also going to take advantage of this idiotic competition to throw their own unforgettable farewell party.

Even in its final moments, Brooklyn Nine-Nine doesn’t forget to make us laugh, with twists and turns, twists, and beautiful nods to series highlights (we still remember the Backstreet Boys song!).

In any case, this final episode will allow the return of one of the great forgettables of season 8: Gina Lynette (Chelsea Perrett), more bitter and funny than ever, with her lines that hit the mark. We also find a grizzled Pimento, an insufferable Teddy (still in love with Amy), or even a Charles-like Bill. Not Doug Judd, who got a farewell episode a few weeks earlier.

Holt and Peralta, B99’s best duo?

Brooklyn Nine-Nine ends the same way it began, giving us pure, hard-hitting entertainment that doesn’t come close to tears. On the contrary, he respects the characters he developed: Jack is more mature, Holt is more human (we miss his laugh so much!), Rosa (Stephanie Beatriz) comes to terms with her bisexuality, Charles (Joe Lo Truglio) no longer lives in the shadow of his best friend…

And if the police department has lost its best elements, it is now run by a man who finally deserves his quarter hour of fame: the one and only Terry (Terry Crews)! Let’s just say: There will never be enough episodes or seasons with these Brooklyn Nine-Nine characters, but they’ll be on their way after doing their job: chilling us for a few years.

Trailer for the eighth and final season:

Source: allocine

You may also like