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The Great season 3 review: The Hulu comedy makes a triumphant return

Elle Fanning and Nicholas Hoult continue to craft one of TV's most fascinating romances

TV Reviews The Great
The Great season 3 review: The Hulu comedy makes a triumphant return
Nicholas Hoult and Elle Fanning in The Great season 3 Photo: Christian Black/Hulu

There’s nothing on TV right now quite as boisterous as The Great. Of course, there are dozens of period pieces, but none revel in such a brazen approach to the genre as Hulu’s comedy. The show’s strength has always lied in molding the story of Russia’s Empress, Catherine the Great, into a rowdy and heartbreaking journey that’s almost entirely inaccurate. Series creator and writer Tony McNamara embraces that it’s the opposite of a true story, allowing The Great to tell wild narratives about Catherine (Elle Fanning) navigating the court’s histrionics as she struggles to remain in power.

The show’s biting tone makes it a feverish mix of political satire, an endearing love story, and a significant coming-of-age adventure. It’s challenging to juggle all of these aspects gracefully, but the cast and crew commendably toe the line without losing their footing. Season three, which arrives May 12 on Hulu, is no different. It gradually heightens the stakes for Catherine with her marriage to Peter (Nicholas Hoult), diplomatic threats, and friendships. The show becomes a slightly bleaker version of itself without losing any of the fun.

Its success wouldn’t have happened if Fanning weren’t leading the charge. She’s always been charismatic as the Empress, which led to a well-deserved Emmy nomination in 2022. She doesn’t hold back in season three; it’s her most profound performance yet. Fanning goes to incredible heights as Catherine deals with tragedies, an uprising, motherhood, her team slowly falling apart, and constant lust. She embodies her character’s manic energy, ungodly confidence, and idling grief flawlessly (episode six, in particular, is a standout). It feels like she was born to play this role—a horny and cunning queen ready to save an empire that doesn’t want to be saved.

No one is having more fun on-screen than Fanning and Hoult. They’ve evolved their characters’ toxicities into a relationship worth rooting for. He’s something of a revelation as Peter, an insufferable fool who morphs into a hilarious husband. Every dialogue delivery is scathing, whether expressing a casual desire to torture or a passionate speech about oral sex after their son’s first word is pussy. Catherine and Peter begin season three after she tries to kill him but accidentally stabs his lookalike, Pugachev (also played by Hoult). They’re now in the 17th-century version of couples therapy: playing Badminton, airing out their feelings, and peacefully raising their child. Anything to try and forget that she almost murdered him for hooking up with her mother (who fell to her death from a window mid-fucking, by the way).

The Great takes their mammoth problems and turns them into comedy gold (which is possible because the writing is terrific, something worth remembering in the current environment). Against all odds, they find genuine love in hopeless circumstances. “We have rewritten each other in the best, most infuriating way,” she tells him at a crucial halfway point. They are the glue holding The Great together. But they’re not the only ones with delightful chemistry. Everyone on the show shares palpable sparks, with characters indulging in raunchy, verbose dialogue and excessive foreplay whenever possible.

In fact, The Great’s unabashed dedication to being sexy is what makes it, well, so great. The script takes advantage of no one having any boundaries in the mid-1700s through everyone, but primarily through Peter’s aunt, Elizabeth (Belinda Bromilow). She boasts about sleeping with her nephew’s lookalike and taking Peter’s best friend, Grigor (Gwilym Lee), to his first orgy. She advises two bickering characters by saying, “I always thought fucking the same man should bring women together.” Elizabeth is the lowkey MVP. The Great isn’t shy about depicting electric sex scenes, either. (The intimacy coordinator deserves an award.)

The Great Season 3 | Official Trailer | Hulu

While the show is still primarily a triumphant and intense joyride, the 10 hourlong episodes do run the risk of being repetitive. Some storylines spin in exasperating circles, including whether Catherine’s allies are ultimately trustworthy because it’s an angle the show has tackled since it began. Her best friend Marial (Phoebe Fox), Archbishop “Archie” (Adam Godley), army chief Velementov (Douglas Hodge), and Elizabeth get distinctive arcs. Still, some are more interesting than others, like Marial dealing with the tantrums of her 12-year-old husband, as one does.

Unfortunately, Georgina’s (Charity Wakefield) twisted narrative remains perplexing, and Orlo (Sacha Dhawan) is underutilized even more than he was in season two in a disappointing turn. At least the supporting cast is talented, with Lee finally getting material that lets him show off his acting chops in the latter half of the season. The Great is also visually compelling because of Sharon Long’s costumes, the beautiful set design, and the camerawork. Jaffar Mahmood’s direction choices prop up the show (again, episode six is a standout).

The Great wraps its third season with a certain degree of finality. It could potentially go on because Catherine’s reign continues for years, but even if it doesn’t, the show goes out in a blaze of glory here. Fanning’s daring performance in the season finale is a stellar goodbye encapsulating why McNamara’s series works. It’s unhinged, potent, and charismatic while being laugh-out-loud funny. Since Pen15 ended, The Great has easily become Hulu’s flagship comedy because of this unique creative vision.


All episodes of The Great season three drop May 12 on Hulu.

14 Comments

  • refinedbean-av says:

    This is one of my favorite current shows – so happy it got another season and can’t wait to dive in. It does suck to hear that Orlo is under-used again, though.

  • thundercatsridesagain-av says:

    I’m glad it’s back and glad to see a positive review. I’m bummed because this season-long review means we won’t be getting individual episode recaps. There’s really nothing to talk about with the show at this point. Episodic reviews let conversations develop over the course of a season. I miss the days when recaps were AV Club’s bread and butter. 

  • deb03449a1-av says:

    The central tension can’t go on forever, and I hope the show doesn’t overstay it’s welcome by drawing it out. I was feeling it start to get drawn out in Season 2.

  • zorrocat310-av says:

    I have enjoyed both seasons and will check this out.But for everyone here, do check out THE EMPRESS.  Yes you’ll have to wade through subtitles,  but it is absolutely great.  

  • John--W-av says:

    Huzzah!

  • weallknowthisisnothing-av says:

    The best show that I can’t get anyone to watch, though I do use plenty of huzzahs in texts.

  • raycearcher-av says:

    Just some history pedantry:By the time Catherine actually lived in Russia, Peter was dead.Catherine was not a naive, well-intentioned minor noble who got shipped off to marry a stranger, she was Peter’s cousin, knew him from childhood, and was part of a family who were heavily on the take to represent Russian interests in Germany. Peter’s mother was essentially Catherine’s mother’s intelligence liaison.The Russo-Swedish war ended before Peter was Tsar and Catherine’s primary foreign relations were with England, not France.Although vulgar, drunk, and too young to be a good ruler, Peter was far from the sociopath depicted on the show. In fact, his only major political decision was to extend the legal right to life to the serf class. Catherine made no attempt to dissolve the serfdom system and had no interest in doing so.Catherine the Great was the first Russian leader to invade and occupy Crimea. She did so not because of the oft-cited argument that Russia holds cultural claim to the region, but openly and specifically to secure a defensible seaport. The actual Count Orlov was a ruthless political manipulator with virtually no desire for humanitarian reform and most of his family was made up of professional murderers (allegedly).I know the mental infants who love this stupid show don’t care about any of this, but these were real people who had tremendous global influence, not the silly cartoons the program makes them out to be – and they did a lot of REAL horrendous stuff for extremely political reasons. If you know the history, “The Great” is kind of like if you made a rom-com about Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln vying for the affections of beautiful socialite Harriet Tubman. Weirdly, the one thing the show DOES get right is the tremendously cosmopolitan nature of the Russian court. The Russian empire was VAST, and the Tsar would have held court to people of many ethnic, linguistic, and religious backgrounds. There were a number of influential Afro-Russians at the time as well. I’m not sure if the diversity of the cast is actually meant to reflect this, or if they just thought it would be hip to do it, although given the utter ignorance of history in the rest of the show I’m betting on the latter.TL/DR: This show is stupid and offensive, and all the characters were boring monsters or dead in real life.

  • jgp1972-av says:

    id like a definite ending for this show, but if it doesnt have one, the ride was enough.

  • ijohng00-av says:

    this review has made me want to watch this. i enjoyed the first 2 episodes of s1 but never got round to continuing it. i’m going to get on it now, even better knowing they worked to a satisfaying conclusion.

  • schwartz666-av says:

    Binge watching it right now…
    Fanning, Hoult, and Bromilow (Aunt) all more than deserve (at the very least) Nominations! Excellent & hilarious performances all around really.
    Also, some truly top-notch dark comedy writing from Mr. McNamara once again.Huzzah!

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