[s4e5] The Funeral [DIRECT]

Kendall seizes Roman’s failure as an opportunity. His impromptu eulogy is a masterpiece of corporate branding, reframing Logan’s cruelty as "vitality" and "force." He effectively privatizes the family’s grief, using the pulpit to crown himself the new patriarch. The Ghost of Logan Roy

After weeks of preening as Logan’s chosen successor, Roman suffers a humiliating psychological breakdown. His inability to finish the eulogy signals his total disqualification from the "killer" role Logan demanded. His grief is real, but in the world of Succession , vulnerability is a fatal weakness.

Should the focus be more on (like the use of handheld cameras)? [S4E5] The Funeral

Is this for a or a personal blog/review ? I can adjust the tone and depth based on what you need!

The episode centers on the tension between genuine emotion and strategic optics. The funeral isn't a private mourning period; it’s a televised industry event. Every character is "performing" their grief to secure power: Kendall seizes Roman’s failure as an opportunity

Ewan’s surprise eulogy provides the only moment of unvarnished truth. By describing Logan’s childhood trauma and the "terrible force" he became, Ewan provides the moral autopsy of the show. He reminds the audience that while the siblings are fighting over a kingdom, the king was a man who "shut out the light" for others. This contrasts sharply with the siblings' attempts to romanticize a man who never truly loved them without conditions. Political Machinations

This episode of Succession , "The Funeral," serves as the series' emotional and thematic climax, stripping away the corporate posturing to reveal the hollowed-out core of the Roy family. While ostensibly a farewell to Logan, the episode is actually a brutal competition for his succession, proving that even in death, Logan’s influence remains the sun around which his children violently orbit. The Performance of Grief His inability to finish the eulogy signals his

"The Funeral" is a masterclass in irony. It shows that Logan Roy is more powerful as a memory and a vacuum than he ever was as a man. The siblings are finally free of him, yet they have never been more trapped by his legacy. By the time the casket is lowered, it’s clear that Logan didn't just build an empire—he built a cage that his children will likely never escape.