BoJack gets Sarah Lynn to break her sobriety to help drown his depression, and experiences the next few months through blackouts.BoJack gets Sarah Lynn to break her sobriety to help drown his depression, and experiences the next few months through blackouts.BoJack gets Sarah Lynn to break her sobriety to help drown his depression, and experiences the next few months through blackouts.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- BoJack Horseman
- (voice)
- Princess Carolyn
- (voice)
- Diane Nguyen
- (voice)
- …
- Mr. Peanutbutter
- (voice)
- …
- Todd Chavez
- (voice)
- (credit only)
- Simon
- (voice)
- Penny Carson
- (voice)
- Wiz Khalifa
- (voice)
- Sarah Lynn
- (voice)
- Drinking Bird
- (voice)
- …
- Jill Pill
- (voice)
- …
- Cuddlywhiskers
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Its a very heavy feat, accomplished by writers who definitely deserve the praise for their vision. To bring such deep and affecting life from one dimensional nihilistic characters who upon first glance appear only as extreme caricatures . But as we unravel the layers of their life stories and subsequent pain, and bare witness to to them being exposed by their impending bottom, we see them as mirrors to the rawest and existential human experiences. Ambition, purpose, & ultimately depression when those things dont bring us happiness. I weep for Sarah Lynne and Bojack, & every soul in need of something to helo the keep going, but never attains it. That is the essence of this episode "Thats too Much man". Life, sometimes is too much. And how sometimes when when we are drowning, the actual peril is reaching out. This episode hit all the feels. And is the saddest and most well done of the series. Bravo.
I'm in the middle of a rewatch right now and honestly I'm dreading getting up to this episode because while their lives are spiralling out of control, it's almost portrayed as fun and entertaining, but that's done so that when the end comes around, it hits you THAT much harder.
And that honestly makes me wanna cry just thinking about it.
It's such a well written episode though. I wouldn't change a thing.
Too Much Man is a predictable but very well made episode that excels in black comedy and character development.
BoJack and Sarah go through a substance fuelled journey that is written cleverly from a specific perspective. It includes several moments of self-reflection by various characters that tie the plot and themes together very well.
The dialogue and visuals are consistently funny (mostly in a dark way) but as always in BoJack you feel a sense of dread about where events are heading. When the climax arrives it is not unexpected, but delivered perfectly.
For me it's an 8.5/10, but I round upwards.
This was, along with Escape from L. A, the best and darkest episode thus far! This was JoJack at his lowest, trying to drown his sorrows and sins in drugs and alcohol... dragging Sarah Lynn into it!
I've always loved Sarah Lynn, she was only a victim of her environment.. amd it really seemed she was going somewhere!
Thats why the ending completely broke me! It took some time before i realized just how dark it was!
Now I can only think... what would have happened if BoJack didn't call her?
Did you know
- TriviaThe painting above Sarah Lynn's bed is a spoof of "Ophelia" by John Everett Millais.
- Quotes
[last lines]
BoJack Horseman: See, Sarah Lynn? We're not doomed. In the grand scheme of things, we're just tiny specks that will one day be forgotten. So it doesn't matter what we did in the past, or how we'll be remembered. The only thing that matters is right now. This moment. This one spectacular moment we are sharing together. Right, Sarah Lynn? Sarah Lynn? Sarah Lynn?
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Ringer's 100 Best TV Episodes of the Century (2018)
- SoundtracksBojack Horseman Ending Credits Song
Performed by Grouplove
Details
- Runtime
- 25m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD