"Ozark" convenes for its final season, when Marty and Wendy White Money Ltd. need just one more move against the Mexican cartel and they're out, but what did Michael Corleone say in "The Godfather 3"? .
Those who are not allowed to finish like humans are, as usual, the white-trash gang in town, the federal government, the grown-up kids - and above all: Netflix.
Someone at the streaming giant attached a gun to the creators' temple and demanded a "split season split" - so the fourth and final season is divided into the first seven episodes that aired over the weekend, and the last seven will air sometime when we forget to be angry about it later this year.
Five years we've been following the same money wizard (the wonderful Jason Bateman) and his Monkey Business, but even if we've already seen series based on ordinary people who have become involuntary criminals, "Ozark" has something beyond what gives it a soul: the parental segment.
With all the appreciation for "Ozark," she has never reached the status of a work worthy of splitting her final season in two.
It's high quality and fun and features surprising twists - but not at the level of angering us about a mid-tension cut.
Maybe just for the fascinating character of Ruth Langmore (Julia Garner), worth forgiving them.
Were we wrong?
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