Party of One
- El episodio se transmitió el 15 ago 2025
- TV-MA
- 43min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
4.5/10
876
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAfter attending a lavish bridal fashion show, Carrie works on accepting her next phase; LTW finds inspiration to weather the highs and lows of her marriage; Miranda's first stint hosting Tha... Leer todoAfter attending a lavish bridal fashion show, Carrie works on accepting her next phase; LTW finds inspiration to weather the highs and lows of her marriage; Miranda's first stint hosting Thanksgiving dinner goes from bad to worse.After attending a lavish bridal fashion show, Carrie works on accepting her next phase; LTW finds inspiration to weather the highs and lows of her marriage; Miranda's first stint hosting Thanksgiving dinner goes from bad to worse.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Chris Jackson
- Herbert Wexley
- (as Christopher Jackson)
Opiniones destacadas
The final episode of "And Just Like That," titled "Party of One," closes Carrie Bradshaw's journey and the gang's in a way that's, at the very least, strange. If the last shot tries to be symbolic, with Carrie walking confidently through her massive apartment to Barry White, finally embracing the narrative that she's not "alone," but rather "on her own," what really sticks in your memory is that bizarre scene where Carrie, Miranda, and Victor Garber try to deal with a clogged toilet caused by a lactose-intolerant young woman. That grotesque, cartoonish choice pretty much sums up the offbeat tone the show leaned into across its three seasons: a fragile balance between wanting to honor the legacy of "Sex and the City" while at the same time twisting it into something disjointed and disproportionately odd.
Carrie's farewell does feel somewhat coherent, since she's always been a character floating between glamour and loneliness, but the way the other storylines wrapped up leaves the impression of something chopped off mid-sentence. Miranda, for example, ends with a storyline loaded with open-ended possibilities, like the imminent birth of her grandchild; Seema, who had become the spiritual successor to Samantha, signs off with a throwaway line about not missing gluten; Lisa, after a whole season teasing a Michelle Obama cameo, is reduced to a vague promise of narrating her own documentary series. Charlotte gets a bit more dignity, dealing sensitively with her youngest child's gender identity, while Anthony gets a lighter, if comedic, ending, breaking off an engagement but keeping his relationship. But as a whole, none of it feels like a true conclusion.
The biggest problem is that the episode fails to deliver what's always been the heart of this franchise: the friends gathered around a table, trading witty, funny takes on life. Instead, we get Carrie sitting alone in some futuristic restaurant, surrounded by robots and staring at a stuffed animal, like the show wanted to underline, almost cruelly, her disconnection from the present. Sure, "And Just Like That" has always liked to put its protagonists through humiliating moments (Charlotte fainting, Carrie slipping on the floor, Big's sudden death) but ending on this kind of weirdness feels more unsettling than nostalgic. If in "Sex and the City" Carrie chose love with Big, here she chooses, once and for all, herself. Is it consistent? Yes. But it lacks emotion, it lacks that sense of a proper goodbye the audience expected after following these women for so many years.
And it's impossible not to comment on what's really behind this so-called "ending." Michael Patrick King insists the decision to wrap it up was his, but it's obvious we're looking at a cancellation disguised as closure. HBO Max is trying to sell the idea that this was all planned, when it clearly wasn't, and that feels disrespectful to the legacy of one of TV's most important franchises. "And Just Like That" was announced as one of the streamer's flagship shows at launch, a prestige bet to bring in subscribers. Ending a story of this size without real care, without the honesty to call it a proper final season, cheapens the work of the actresses and the characters that shaped generations. The audience deserved a farewell that was announced, grand, and worthy of the journey that started back in the '90s. What we got instead was a rushed, awkward cut that leaves behind more of a taste of disregard than of celebration.
Carrie's farewell does feel somewhat coherent, since she's always been a character floating between glamour and loneliness, but the way the other storylines wrapped up leaves the impression of something chopped off mid-sentence. Miranda, for example, ends with a storyline loaded with open-ended possibilities, like the imminent birth of her grandchild; Seema, who had become the spiritual successor to Samantha, signs off with a throwaway line about not missing gluten; Lisa, after a whole season teasing a Michelle Obama cameo, is reduced to a vague promise of narrating her own documentary series. Charlotte gets a bit more dignity, dealing sensitively with her youngest child's gender identity, while Anthony gets a lighter, if comedic, ending, breaking off an engagement but keeping his relationship. But as a whole, none of it feels like a true conclusion.
The biggest problem is that the episode fails to deliver what's always been the heart of this franchise: the friends gathered around a table, trading witty, funny takes on life. Instead, we get Carrie sitting alone in some futuristic restaurant, surrounded by robots and staring at a stuffed animal, like the show wanted to underline, almost cruelly, her disconnection from the present. Sure, "And Just Like That" has always liked to put its protagonists through humiliating moments (Charlotte fainting, Carrie slipping on the floor, Big's sudden death) but ending on this kind of weirdness feels more unsettling than nostalgic. If in "Sex and the City" Carrie chose love with Big, here she chooses, once and for all, herself. Is it consistent? Yes. But it lacks emotion, it lacks that sense of a proper goodbye the audience expected after following these women for so many years.
And it's impossible not to comment on what's really behind this so-called "ending." Michael Patrick King insists the decision to wrap it up was his, but it's obvious we're looking at a cancellation disguised as closure. HBO Max is trying to sell the idea that this was all planned, when it clearly wasn't, and that feels disrespectful to the legacy of one of TV's most important franchises. "And Just Like That" was announced as one of the streamer's flagship shows at launch, a prestige bet to bring in subscribers. Ending a story of this size without real care, without the honesty to call it a proper final season, cheapens the work of the actresses and the characters that shaped generations. The audience deserved a farewell that was announced, grand, and worthy of the journey that started back in the '90s. What we got instead was a rushed, awkward cut that leaves behind more of a taste of disregard than of celebration.
As soon as they told us that this season was going to be the last one, I knew that nothing would be wrapped up. It feels like the whole season was a waste. If they knew from the very beginning that this was going to be it, Why did they make the choices that they made?! Comparing it to the finale of Sex and the City -. I can't even believe that's the same Were involved. That show wrapped up so nicely and this was just meh. I don't know if they intend to have a movie or if this really is it.
I never write reviews, but I was so disappointed with this season and this ending. Then I googled to see if the show would have a season 4 and realized this is it. It was a terrible way to end it. The plot was thin and Carrie just ends up with the short end of the stick again. Why even have the storyline with the writer if nothing ever comes of it, and it ultimately destroyed what she had with Aiden.
...but with a whimper do we bid the Sex and the City franchise good-bye. All the characters end up in a happy place with their partners except for Carrie who realizes she is not alone but on her own. There were so many things the writers got wrong from the very start of AJLT but can never be forgiven for not only killing off Big but having Carrie declare Big was a BIG mistake. That one statement negated the original storyline of SATC and set this current series up for major criticism. There was a lot they got wrong but at least they knew it was time to wave the white flag.
I really wanted to love this show, but it really could have just been an email. We could have let it end in the early 2000s and never circled back to a reboot. Such a disappointment. Season one was pretty awful and season two felt incrementally "better." Nevertheless, there are so many storylines that started and were left in the dust.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe original Sex and the City credit music plays at the end of this episode.
- ErroresAt 11:17 when Carrie and Charlotte are walking down the street after returning from the Bridal Show, you can see that a couple and a guy are passing by twice when the camera makes a close up while Charlotte is inviting Carrie to see her new hallway.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 43min
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