Gossip Girl’s Season 2 Finale Is a Mess—But Not in a Good Way
Photo Courtesy of HBO Max
Gossip Girl is a show that only thrives when it embraces being messy. After a lackluster first season, the HBO Max reboot’s second installment has been a stark improvement, benefiting from the added layers of unserious chaos that have, for the briefest of moments, felt somewhat nostalgic of the original series. It’s been fun to watch this new cast of Upper East Side elites commit one glamorous atrocity after another, each week somehow outdoing the prior in terms of campy scandal as the series builds up to its ultimate showdown: the unmasking of Gossip Girl.
Try as it may, Gossip Girl’s finale unfortunately does a disservice to the rest of the season, as it clearly ran out of time to give its reveal an adequate ending, considering how the show was canceled just last week. What’s left as a result is an overstuffed final episode that seems to be full of everything and nothing, all at the same time. It’s honestly just a mess—but not in a good way.
For starters, “I Am Gossip” rushes through far too many plot points for the sake of drama while simultaneously leaving characters out to dry. The finale manages to fit three takedown attempts, the Met Gala, cameos from Andy Cohen and Jonathan Whitney (Eric’s boyfriend from Season 2 of the original series), and even a trip to Italy all within the span of an hour. That’s not to mention several of the characters’ individual storylines, including Obie (Eli Brown) teaming up with Gossip Girl in an attempt to save himself after sending his mother to prison for a crime his sister actually committed, as well as Aki (Evan Mock) and Audrey (Emily Alyn Lind) wanting to end their relationship with Max (Thomas Doherty). Meanwhile, Kate (Tavi Gevinson) believes herself to be seemingly invincible while running GG, despite her status as Manhattan’s #1 enemy.
Frustratingly enough, the characters that ended up suffering the most were Luna (Zion Moreno) and Monet (Savannah Lee Smith), who were once again overlooked and underutilized. Their roles were constantly limited to acting as Julien’s (Jordan Alexander) henchwomen, despite having previously interesting and even emotional arcs in earlier episodes. The first half of the season built Monet up to be the reboot’s necessary Blair Waldorf, yet confiscated that Queen Bee status as quickly as she established it. In another aspect, Episode 8 explored Luna’s tense relationship with her mother, finally offering a glimpse into her home life, only for it to never be acknowledged again. Although she eventually calls Julien out for only thinking about herself, the show still writes Luna off into the background, even in the finale.
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