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The Gang goes to Ireland, as season 15 of It’s Always Sunny hits its stride

Long-lost fathers, secret sex islands, undiagnosed COVID, and the priesthood make for an outstanding two-parter

TV Reviews Charlie Kelly
The Gang goes to Ireland, as season 15 of It’s Always Sunny hits its stride

Photo: Prashant Gupta/FXX

“If I’ve gotta stop mid-rant every time I want to order a beer, it’s going to interrupt my flow.”

Luckily for us (if not for Dee) the first two episodes of It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia’s extended vacation to the Emerald Isle rarely impedes anybody’s flow. Not Frank, who, we discover, has a typically Frank Reynolds-esque ulterior motive. Not Mac, whose prideful excitement at visiting the old McDonald ancestral homestead instead leads him to a McDonalds, and the deflating revelation that he got that shamrock thigh tattoo for nothing. And certainly not Dee and Dennis, whose misadventures in unlikely Irish TV stardom (as “obnoxious American MILF number one”) and as obnoxious American anti-vaxxer potentially infecting all of Ireland, respectively, spiral calamitously out of control.

And then there’s Charlie, whose innocent lifelong correspondence with his pen pal/imaginary friend Shelley Kelly turns out to have been a very real correspondence with a man now claiming to be his actual father. Partway through “The Gang’s Still In Ireland,” Charlie tracks down Shelley to his cheese shop where, with Frank boorishly hawking all over Shelley Kelly’s wares while abusing the jam-tasting policy, we first see Shelley, dispatching a rat with a large stick. Yup, it’s looking like Charlie’s met his real dad.

Taking the Gang out of Philly has been done before, of course, but this episodes-long Irish interlude (the Gang is still in Ireland at the end of “The Gang’s Still In Ireland”) is a big swing in a season that’s emerged with uncharacteristic wobbliness out of the Season 15 gate. But while an eventful overseas jaunt might smack of the late-run desperation of 80s sitcoms like The Facts Of Life or Family Ties, where creators try to brush off the gathering moss by plunging their aging characters into some disposable, colorful comic intrigue, this two-parter (written by Rob McElhenney, Charlie Day, and Glenn Howerton and directed by Megan Ganz) hits the ground in deliriously confident stride.

Those shows invariably introduced some continental antagonists (usually sneaky foreign spy types) to bedevil their heroes’ on-location R&R. But the Gang doesn’t need any outside help in ramping up international incident into comic chaos. The Gang is chaos, and Ireland, thus far, largely plays straight-country to their imported depredations.

Frank, as it turns out, has long been (through the shell company that is Frank’s Fluids, LLC) the number one beverage supplier to Jeffrey Epstein, leading to his frenzied efforts to destroy all evidence of his association with the late, disturbingly well-connected sex trafficker. “95 percent of what went on down there was not pedophilia,” alibis Frank, assuring a horrified Dee and Dennis that he was only a frequent visitor to Epstein’s crime island for the snorkeling.

On another show, Frank’s even tangential proximity to one of the most notorious (and ongoing) investigations into a rats’ nest of wealthy sex criminals might test audience empathy. But this is Frank, whose pig-rooting wallow in the hedonistic existence his wealth has enabled is Sunny’s atavistic punching bag of old-school bigotry and all-around throwback awfulness. The Gang’s Boomer representative has always been there to counterbalance the tortuous self-exoneration of the four younger members. Frank is the gluttonous, rutting, stripped-bare id of the Gang’s collectively fetid identity.

So I can totally buy both that Frank would want no part of that whole pedophilia thing and that he’d happily make a ton of money selling booze to and splashing around with the rich and powerful people who very much did. And that, with the heat closing in, he’d dragoon his sort-of children into his scheme to stuff the shredded Frank’s Fluids paper trail into the peat-stove (and occasional untended craft beer vat) in every pub in Ireland. (The fact that nobody is taken aback at Frank’s offhand term “shred and spread” for his coverup spree is another instance of Sunny’s brilliant use of shorthand to hint at just how commonplace such shenanigans are.)

Dee’s complicity in evidence-tampering notwithstanding, her thespian’s dreams are inevitably dashed before they begin. If Frank’s the moral punching bag, then Dee’s the actual one, as her frenzied attempts to make one single call time for her big break are thwarted by, well, let’s see: Getting blackout drunk, drugged, and essentially kidnapped by the guys (who trade in her first class ticket for five coaches); getting creamed by two separate automobiles on the Irish roads (one driven by Dennis, defiantly on the wrong side of the street); being unpresentably disfigured by horrific, car-related head wounds; getting essentially kidnapped again, and stuffed into Dennis’ boot after he runs her over; having her plum role stolen by the vacationing Waitress (in the least elegant plot twist of the two episodes); and ultimately stalked and potentially beheaded by her own brother. (Tune in next week to see.)

In that latter case, Dennis, ditching the Gang’s rural one-room accommodations, rents himself and Dee a decrepit castle, which may or may not be haunted by a head-chopping ghost. Naturally, the clear indication that the unvaccinated Dennis is afflicted with fast-moving COVID is probably behind his late-night axe-happy cliffhanger attack on his sister, but the episodes lay in enough further details of Dennis’ psychopathic tendencies to at least suggest he was ripe for some head-hungry possessing spirit. Approaching a redheaded Irish bartender, Dennis leaps right into dead-eyed fury once his COVID-numbed nose can’t smell the pure scent he’d imagined a true Irish ginger would possess. “The hair is on the head,” the feverish Dennis mumbles menacingly as he pursues Dee through their castle’s cobwebby corridors in his delirium, “The hair is a lie.”

If Dennis is the episodes’ ugly, contagious American, Mac is the Yank boorishly seeking validation in his connection to the motherland. The twist (revealed in gloriously unconcerned grunts from Mac’s mom over the phone) that Mac’s entire, self-styled identity as the Irish badass bouncer of a pub named Paddy’s is all a careless lie cooked up by his criminal father (whose real name turns out to have been Luther Vandross) knocks Mac once more off his pins. Ranting to the guys that he doesn’t know who he is any more, the episode gives Dennis the trenchantly fed-up response, “Identity doesn’t have to factor into absolutely every decision you make.”

But, for Mac, identity is all he has. Ass-kicker, Irish, Catholic, Gay—the joke has never been whether Mac was or was not those things, but how desperately he’s thrown himself into various roles in a quest for self-validation. Mac the neglected son of two truly shitty parents (although not as shitty as Charlie’s), struggling to reconcile his sexuality with what his religion said about his sexuality. Mac the easily bruised son of a terrifying thug and a monosyllabic lump. Each successive, monomaniacal plunge into the deep end of whatever identity he thinks will earn him love and respect and belonging that week turns Mac into the Gang’s running joke.

Here, the discovery that he’s Dutch on both maternal and paternal sides (so, double-Dutch), is treated cavalierly by Charlie as the pair wreck an Irish hall of records. (“You Dutch?,” Charlie asks airily after hearing Mac’s side of the transatlantic call.) But for Mac, it’s yet another hammer-blow to whatever rickety edifice of self-esteem and borrowed glory he’s managed to construct, with Mac’s lament to Frank, Charlie, and Dennis yet another fumbling attempt to find just one person who’ll empathize. Mac’s explanation that some element of himself has to be “first” in determining how to live is the sort deft Sunny characterization that will break your heart if you think about it too long.

Being Mac, however, no existential dilemma can’t be diverted with a Hail Mary grand gesture, so he heads right to the nearest church and, interrupting a mass in a funny reveal, unloads his dilemma on the bewildered priest in graphic detail. Again, being Mac, this pell-mell rush to the seminary is awash in unintentional double entendre “I only want one man inside me,” Mac states eagerly, before amending his desire to enter the priesthood to include the whole Trinity. Mac’s Irish-ness stripped from him, and his homosexuality proving as unfulfilling as his early-series womanizing (Mac did apparently have a real-life threesome at some point, which, good for Mac), Catholicism is now “first,” and therefore, he hurls himself right into priestly study with an inappropriately hunky seminarian. “Yeah, I ain’t falling in love with Gus,” Mac notes happily upon the priest swapping in a pudding-faced fellow student for the long-haired fella who sent Mac reeling on a serious REO Speedwagon-scored backslide.

The heart of this typically—and hilariously—destructive five-person international incident is Charlie. That’s often the case, as Charlie Kelly’s place in the Gang is secured less by overweening greed, pride, gluttony, or pick another deadly sin, but from the simple fact that there’s no place else in the world where he’d be accepted. For all the backbreaking “Charlie work,” and the abuse, and the fact that (as we found out last week) he’s been cheated out of his rightful place as Paddy’s primary owner, the Gang needs Charlie as much as Charlie needs the Gang.

Or does he? Here, after some prime Charlie misunderstanding about his ostensible father’s occupation (“Is he a mongrel or a monster? Thats all I want to know,” Charlie clarifies upon hearing the word “cheesemonger”), Charlie Kelly discovers a door. It’s sadly, inevitably likely, that Meaney’s gruff but affectionate Shelley will turn out to be a disappointment to Charlie. I mean, the pan pal thing was nice, if a little creepy, but the fact that Shelley never told Charlie, in their “gibberish” language that only Charlie could understand (he’s fluent in Gaelic, as it turns out) that he was a lonely, neglected little boy’s real dad is pretty telling.

Still, what a lovely and boisterously believable scene it is when, over drinks at a pub (where every man there also had a fondly remembered turn with Mrs. Kelly), Charlie picks up on the drunken song that Shelley booms out. We know that (in addition to surreptitiously brilliant bar management) Charlie has an improbable talent for music. So it just works when Charlie (Charlie Day making Charlie Kelly’s eyes dance with discovery) matches his father’s lyrics with affectionately apt improvisations of his own. Both Meaney and Day are so in the moment that it makes what could have been contrived, sublime. With the whole bar delightedly chiming in (apart from Frank, distracted with extracting a jam-seed from his bridgework with a metal screw), Charlie and Shelley Kelly raise their glasses and sing, “The Kelly lads, the Kelly boys, we sing, we laugh, we make our noise!”

Taking Charlie and the bloody-mouthed Frank back to his warmly cosy cottage (“This place is charming as shit!,” Frank blurts), Shelley is taken aback at Frank’s assertion that he and Charlie will share the single cot in the living room. And so is Charlie. (He’s not even on board for recounting the time Frank pooped the bed.) Brushing aside Frank’s obvious distress at the pair’s scummy co-existence being so publicly dismissed, Charlie calls out as Shelley ascends the stairs to his room, trying out the phrase, “Goodnight… Dad” with such exquisite hesitancy that I felt the futile bloom of unexpected hope. Hope that, maybe this time, Charlie Kelly has found a father figure who will not only acknowledge him, but actually treat him with something like human respect.

Danny DeVito echoes the line when Frank, sat alone on the cot, watches a deep-in-thought Charlie close his guest room door and says a lonely little, “Goodnight, Charlie” to the now-empty room. The second episode ends there.

It’s Always Sunny toys with us as skillfully as it finds new and funny ways for the Gang to get into trouble. Dee, Dennis, Mac, Frank, and Charlie are as toxic as five Philly nogoodniks can be, but Sunny always—always—reminds us that the Gang is us. And so when Mac has an epiphany in an unfortunate therapist’s office that he’s not even sure his so-called friends even like him (or he them), the momentary flash of self awareness has to be snuffed out so that the show can continue. When Dee hits rock bottom and submits to the guys’ incessant personal abuse without fighting back, she has to be cruelly and elaborately re-crushed so the show can continue.

Dennis can leave with a woman and a child he’d forgotten about for the Paddy’s-less wilds of North Dakota, telling his skeptical sort-of father, “You know what, Frank? I’ll figure it out. Because I don’t want my kid to grow up like I did, with some asshole dad who’s never even around.” But then he’s back for the next season’s premiere without an explanation, fatherhood hardly ever mentioned again. And even Frank gets his show-breaking moment, as we get what remains a shocking glimpse of just how disconnected the aging and brain-battered Frank is from what’s going on around him. That episode ends in Frank’s point-0f-view shot, as we hear him croaking out with childlike glee at his and Charlie’s bedtime game of Night Crawlers. “It’s stirring! It’s stirring!,” the transported Frank cries, swept away on Charlie’s mad tale of a welcoming fairyland, even for the likes of them.

It’s a maddeningly tough balance to find, and the fact that Sunny can still tiptoe right up to the edge so expertly remains a miracle of long-form TV storytelling. (I know some claim that things tipped too far when “Mac Finds His Pride,” but I disagree. Wholeheartedly.) These two episodes give each member of the Gang enough narrative and thematic rope to allow them just a peek at the emerald sunlight outside of Paddy’s, Philly, and their rats’ nest of misdeeds and entanglements. They’re still awful, naturally. (Dennis’ denial about his COVID status sees him uproariously failing to stifle his red-faced coughing in front of a friendly realtor.) But “The Gang Goes To Ireland” and “The Gang’s Still In Ireland” serve as a skillfully constructed scaffold for when those five ropes inevitably snap taut.

Stray observations

  • Each episode begins with Charlie urging everyone to waft the restorative power of stew into an unconscious Dee’s face.
  • In addition to using a dingy Irish office as a tax shelter, and enabling the flow of intoxicants to a sex offender’s fuck island, Frank also abandoned the office cat to become petrified into the carpet. RIP, Ralphie.
  • While Frank maintains his innocence as to the more illegal and horrifying acts, he does seem to imply that real-life Epstein associate Bill Gates was really into manatees on that island.
  • Mac, as soon as Frank mentions his threat to kill himself over his just-discovered Dutch-ness: “I’m not really gonna do it, it’s a cry for help.”
  • I’ve seen online speculation about what members of The Gang would not get vaccinated. Only Dennis, as it turns out. Huh.
  • “Go to the old bell tower and ring the goddamned bell, you bitch!!” I’m in for The Gang to remake The Shining next, with Dennis and Dee as Jack and Wendy.

53 Comments

  • blpppt-av says:

    Is anybody getting a bit worried that the season finale, ominiously titled “The Gang Carries a Corpse up a Mountain” might be Dennis dying of COVID?I’m not sure I see the point of him catching it if it isn’t his corpse they’re carrying.Although, I suppose it would be fitting for this show to have Miles O’Brien kick the bucket after his reunion with his son.In any case, the first episode was hilarious, with the ‘molded cat’ and Dee getting stuffed in the trunk. Second episode felt weird, with Charlie changing before our very eyes, leave poor sad Frank all alone on the couch.

    • skintagteammatch-av says:

      The ending to the second episode was truly heartwarming and heartbreaking in that order. I’d confidently say that it’s Charlie’s “dad” that is killed off in the finale. I’m also not really buying that it’s his actual dad considering Kelly is his mom and maternal uncle’s last name. 

      • bluedoggcollar-av says:

        It’s not uncommon for an Irish person to have Kellys on both sides, but considering every older guy in the pub slept with his mom, it’s easy to see a return to the status quo.

        • blpppt-av says:

          “but considering every older guy in the pub slept with his mom, it’s easy to see a return to the status quo.”But what if Charlie’s mom wasn’t “involved in the finale”?

    • neanderthalbodyspray-av says:

      It won’t be Dennis dying but more likely someone he gave COVID to.

    • crazelord91-av says:

      After 15 seasons I’m confident it either will be someone they inadvertently killed or it’s it’ll be some twist related to it. At most they accidentally bury Dee alive or something thinking she’s dead but I’m confident they won’t kill off any of the gang

  • disqusdrew-av says:

    Gotta go with an A grade for those episodes. That felt like classic Sunny. No surprise considering both episodes were written by Rob, Glenn, and Charlie.

    • bluedoggcollar-av says:

      These two were so funny I was gasping with laughter (not Covid) at times.Possibly the funniest and cruelest scene was Mac’s phone call with his Mom, where she hangs up in the middle of his distress. The cigarette ash falling on her and staying there for the rest of her time on screen was perfect.

  • acm0416-av says:

    “An authentic Irish…GET FUCKED!!”It’s so liberating that there’s no censored words on this show anymore.

    • redwolfmo-av says:

      I was just coming here to say something similar.  I’ve noticed the change and its for the better

    • drkschtz-av says:

      Wait what, did it change to streaming or something?

      • jessebakerbaker-av says:

        FX and FXX allow like one or two F-words per season these days

        • drkschtz-av says:

          I can’t believe I missed the Fuck Barrier going down by cutting the cord a few years ago. I did witness the Ass Barrier demolished though.

          • scortius-av says:

            so did Mac

          • blippman-av says:

            Cable channels have always been able to use cursing, they just mostly don’t because they don’t want to push away sponsors (the FCC cursing rules only apply to the networks). It’s great that FX has let them do whatever cursing they want, but then it’s extremely embarrassing when Sunny reruns are on Comedy Central and they censor ‘bitch,’ which if you do that why are you even running Sunny episodes at all.

          • sunnydandthepurplestuff-av says:

            thats what he said

        • asynonymous3-av says:

          IIRC, the FCC stopped censoring most vulgar language on shows if they were being broadcast on anything other than local channels. I remember catching Goodfellas on AMC about 15 years ago (I’m getting old!) and eventually realizing that they weren’t censoring the word “fuck”…which is a pretty common word in that movie; almost like “a” or “the.”

        • vw0-av says:

          It’s way more than that. They let c-bombs go through uncensored.

      • bassplayerconvention-av says:

        Maybe the fact that it’s on FXX rather than FX? Or maybe they just stopped caring?It doesn’t matter when it leads to a moment as glorious as the one in the original post.

  • foghat1981-av says:

    The scene in the realty office killed me.  That was just amazing.

    • bluedoggcollar-av says:

      The contempt Dee and Dennis had for each other was really well acted, especially considering Dennis barely got a word out.I was glad every actor had a chance to shine. Frank’s balancing act explanation about how 95% of Epstein’s island was just snorkeling before going off about the Silicon Valley guy and the manatees had me rolling. Mac and the priests was great. Charlie at the big reveal was touching. And the ensemble bits like their car ride were also really well done. They were two great episodes.

  • bloodandchocolate-av says:

    I was apprehensive about starting this new season after reading all the lukewarm comments from the first four episodes, but I started the season premiere last night and look forward to catching up to this one.At this stage in Sunny’s life, I will totally accept a more hit-or-miss ratio if we can still get what looks to be a classic episode like this one every once in awhile. It just gets harder for a show to knock it out of the park consistently at this point and come up with ideas that don’t feel recycled.

    • bluedoggcollar-av says:

      My theory is the first shows were tossed off to pad out the season after they mostly focused on the Ireland shows. I just hope what follows keeps up what they started here.

      • captaintylor-av says:

        I still feel like they could have done more with “2020: A Year in Review”.

        • bio-wd-av says:

          This episode made fun of 2020 better with Dennis having covid and not getting vaccinated.  This is the type of comedy I expected instead of weird dated Forrest Gump.

      • xirathi-av says:

        The Ireland shows are only 25% of the episodes of a pretty lame season. There’s like one good joke per episode this season… everybody is just phoning it in (including the writers and their weak scripts).

  • mortimercommafamousthe-av says:

    I used to believe that only Bob Odenkirk could elicit laughs from me by simply yelling the word “fuck”, but Dennis’ “GET FUCKED!” was astounding. 

    • blpppt-av says:

      OT a bit: One of the funniest deliveries of the standard line “What the Fuck?” was given by Justin Kirk’s character in Weeds when he first sees Doug and Jill come out of the bedroom.

  • rraymond-av says:

    The pedophilia “jokes” really just aren’t funny. Uncomfortably so. They’ve done the “You know it’s bad when Frank can claim the moral high ground schtick before. And better.This entire season so far feels like bad spec scripts from outside writers. From the massive rewriting the past of the truly awful roller rink episode, to just plain unfunny Epstein jokes, to Dee getting hard hit by cars twice and bouncing back like a cartoon character.Really really bad.

  • tylercalexander-av says:

    Due to the pandemic, these episodes were not filmed in Ireland. The plan was to film there, but they ended up filming in California instead.

    • sideofmcg-av says:

      I’m pretty sure they were in Ireland. The studio stuff isn’t but they’re on location in actual Ireland for the exterior stuff (except the obvious green screen bits)

      • tylercalexander-av says:

        Rob McElhenney was recently on Kimmel, and during the interview he stated (at about the 7:40 mark on YouTube) that they weren’t able to make it to Ireland. They definitely could have had a small crew there for exterior shots that didn’t have the gang in them, though.

        • sideofmcg-av says:

          They must have just hit Ireland on vacation after it then. They were here – guess they just didn’t get to film

  • alexdub12-av says:

    It’s amazing how this show can still produce such hilarious episodes in its 15th season. Always Sunny is a work of art.

  • circlesky-av says:

    Dennis trying to suppress his cough was one of the funniest scenes they have ever done.

  • hairypothead-av says:

    Why isn’t this season available on demand (Spectrum, Hulu, FXNow) like previous seasons?

  • jay-vee84-av says:

    Charlie’s delivery of “You dutch?” might be a high water mark. It was just so so perfectly delivered

  • sideofmcg-av says:

    Charlie’s Irish in this episode is really good. I know he probably learned it phonetically but it’s spot on. Impressive. Also actual Irish actors playing the Irish people really helped!

  • activetrollcano-av says:

    Is no one gonna talk about Frank being left alone with that “Goodnight, Charlie” line? Danny DeVito pulled my heart strings with that one… I still can’t believe that episodes as funny as this can still leave you with tearful moments. I mean, how long do you think it’s been since Charlie and Frank slept in separate beds? The whole “Who Pooped the Bed?” fiasco was 13 years ago. Now I just gotta wonder how they’ll be moving forward from here to save the dynamic of the Gruesome Twosome.

  • deb03449a1-av says:

    How was Dennis able to enter the country without proof of vaccination? I am guessing he got a fake vaccine card, which would fit the character.

  • dayman2-av says:

    Honestly, thinking about it, Dennis being the only one not getting vaccinated makes perfect sense. It wouldn’t be for political reasons but because he has complete control over his body and doesn’t need any medicine(“sickness be gone!”)

  • hairypothead-av says:

    Why isn’t this season available on demand (Spectrum, Hulu, FXNow) like previous seasons?

  • blippman-av says:

    A much better return to form from the first group of episodes. Each of them having their own extreme crisis and barely giving a shit about the ones each other are having. There’s no way that Charlie’s story ends with him and Shelley leaving on good terms, no one in the Gang can be allowed that sort of happiness, even something like them staying in good graces but Charlie just has to leave Ireland.Also, hell yea, Ganz getting to direct.

  • bio-wd-av says:

    I was genuinely starting to worry about this season.  Goddamn these two episodes were great, everything about Frank on Epstein Island and Mac being Dutch was pitch perfect funny.  I missed this Always Sunny, glad its back.

  • crazelord91-av says:

    I had to rewatch the scene with Dennis in the realtor’s office because Glenn did such a fantastic job and it was hilarious. Got to give him props that he went 110% with it and legitimately seemed like he was about to pop a coronary.

  • jallured1-av says:

    It really makes no sense that Dennis wouldn’t get vaxxed. He’d look at anti-vaxxers and think of them as lowly trash, ignorant, uneducated — the opposite of everything he prides himself on. Honestly, maybe Mac (maybe religious reasons?) or Frank (“the libs want to track me, Chaaaaahlie”) could be candidates, but otherwise the gang doesn’t really have a character-consistent reason not to get jabbed.Anyway, loved this pair of episodes — the ending of the second ep played so close to drama, it was striking. Still waiting for the ep where we find out Mac’s mom caused COVID. Parting note: Anyone looking to fill the Sunny-sized hole in their viewing schedules should really try South Side. It’s got a similar capery vibe with fantastic self-interested characters who never get boring.

    • soylent-gr33n-av says:

      It really makes no sense that Dennis wouldn’t get vaxxed. He’d look at anti-vaxxers and think of them as lowly trash, ignorant, uneducated — the opposite of everything he prides himself on.He would, but he would also believe his “golden godhood” would protect him, plus Dennis refuses to admit he’s middle age, and thinks he’s still in the same shape he was in when in his 20s.

  • sunnydandthepurplestuff-av says:

    I don’t know if Shelly’s a deadbeat dad who never revealed he wasn’t Charlie’s father. Shelly probably told him but Charlie couldn’t make it out.   Charlie’s still kind of illiterate although his fluency in gaelic aka gibberish is a good twist

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