{"id":31684,"date":"2022-06-01T06:21:06","date_gmt":"2022-06-01T06:21:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/norm-macdonald-nothing-special-review\/"},"modified":"2022-06-01T06:21:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-01T06:21:06","slug":"norm-macdonald-nothing-special-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/norm-macdonald-nothing-special-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special Review"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special is now streaming on Netflix.<\/em><\/p>\n

Part eulogy, part COVID-era video event, Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special is a gift left behind by the absurdist stand-up virtuoso – who died of cancer in September 2021<\/u> – followed by a half-hour discussion by a group of comedians who considered him a friend. It’s as wryly funny as any of Macdonald’s most memorable bits, only it arrives with an added melancholy: it was filmed in early 2020, right before the legendary comedian was set to undergo a complicated procedure. He would live for another year and a half, but he seems to have intended for the special to be released after his impending passing by him, so it feels distinctly like the work of a man reckoning with his mortality by him. Of course, given his stature di lui as a beloved (and in his own way, mysterious) performer, that reckoning comes wrapped in a nesting doll of hilarious non-sequiturs.<\/p>\n

What Nothing Special inadvertently captures – in a way traditionally shot and edited specials may not have been able to – is Macdonald’s carefully crafted deadpan chaos. Shot in a single take (household interruptions and all), it plays out in the form of a wildly unstructured rant about dealing with a changing world. Only in true Macdonald fashion, his off-the-cuff musings disguise a lively game of punchline hopscotch, with details and stealth jokes returning, often subtly, several dozen minutes after they’ve surely been forgotten.<\/p>\n

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Netflix Spotlight: May 2022<\/p>\n