![]() ![]() Max really could have used some companionship at home to go along with Luna, who could be a comfort to her father but not understand what had happened. But I found myself remembering that some of the happiest parts of last season came from when they were on solid ground together, and it felt like New Amsterdam really needed some solid ground at the end of “Big Day.” Unlike the Season 5 premiere, none of the devastation had anything to do with the Sharpwin love story ending. In fact, it continued building the bond between Max and Wilder. On the surface, this episode actually didn’t touch on Max’s heartbreak after losing Helen (with only her letter narrated by Freema Agyeman in a voice cameo to go on). All of the doctors were on the verge of tears after getting the news that nobody would be punished, and the closest that the storyline had to a cathartic ending was Iggy visiting Martin and just asking to see the kids, and Max going home to Luna and suggesting that he sleep right by her bed that night. Lily’s mother got a legal marriage license in West Virginia, and no federal laws were being broken with the wedding. The doctors were all appalled that the people who seemed like perfectly normal wedding guests simply caught in a crisis were actually people who supported a marriage between a grown man and little girl, but no arrests could be made. ![]() It was a child wedding, and the fire was actually a smoke bomb from her 15-year-old brother, who was trying to save her. Lily was not the flower girl, but the bride for the very adult groom. ![]()
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