The Good Doctor

‘The Good Doctor’s Final Season Is Even More Heartbreaking Than We Wanted

The series has always been full of tragedies, but we wanted these characters to find some happiness in the final run of episodes.

The Good Doctor has never been afraid to show truly heart-wrenching moments. Not an episode goes by without the patients of St. Bonaventure Hospital enduring some of the most harrowing life-or-death situations. But like many medical dramas (including E.R. and Grey’s Anatomy), the series also has a history of placing its doctors in life-threatening situations. The Good Doctor, which premiered on ABC in 2017, is now in its seventh and final season. Although viewers learned early on that no main characters would be completely safe from catastrophe, many viewers had hoped that its last season would provide more moments of healing. Now that Dr. Shaun Murphy (Freddie Highmore) and Lea (Paige Spara) have their baby boy, Dr. Aaron Glassman (Richard Schiff) has recovered from his brain condition, and Dr. Morgan Reznick (Fiona Gubelmann) and Dr. Alex Park (Will Yun Lee) have been reunited, it seemed as though the characters could finally have some peace. However, now that The Good Doctor is eight episodes into the season, it’s become clear that the writers have no intention of finishing the show without invoking some serious tragedy along the way.

Anyone who watched the first six seasons of the series knew that heartbreak was the name of the game for any and all characters. Dr. Neil Melendez (Nicholas Gonzalez) suffered a shocking death after being severely injured in an earthquake at the end of Season 3. Another one of St. Bonaventure’s own died in a devastating way when Nurse Deena Petringa (Karin Konoval) contracted COVID-19 in Season 4. This loss was particularly hard on the characters of the show and on the audience, since the pandemic still hit very close to home for many. Not all calamitous situations have ended in death, such as the Season 5 stabbing of Dr. Audrey Lim (Christina Chang). But these alarming events furthered the audience’s belief that none of their favorite characters would be safe from misfortune.

Asher’s Death Didn’t Need to Happen in ‘The Good Doctor’s Final Season

After all the tragedies that have unfolded over the years on the series, the expectation was that maybe Season 7 would offer some breathing room for its main characters. Instead of letting the doctors exist in peace, the writers decided to kill off a main character with just five episodes remaining in the entire series. Dr. Asher Wolke (Noah Galvin) had been a fan favorite of the show since joining in Season 4, raised as an Orthodox Jew but turned away from his community and his religion when he realized he was gay. He formed one of the sweeter relationships on the show when he started dating Nurse Jerome Martel (Giacomo Baessato) in Season 5.

In Episode 5 of the final season, while trying to help one of his patients, Asher befriended a rabbi, which allowed him to connect with his Jewish faith again. While dropping the rabbi off at his synagogue, Asher confronted two men who were vandalizing the building and proudly proclaimed his Jewishness (and also admitted to being gay). As Asher walked away in triumph, he was brutally attacked by the men and died in the rabbi’s arms. The saddest and most heartbreaking twist was that Jerome was sitting in a restaurant waiting for Asher so that he could propose to him.

It was shocking to see a beloved character killed so close to the show’s ending. Many viewers argued that Asher could have been beaten and survived (which still could have provided the show with plenty of drama and storylines to explore). Instead, the show fell into a common television trope, referred to as Bury Your Gays, in which LGBTQ+ characters are denied happy endings, usually by being killed off. In a time when LGBTQ+ hate and antisemitism is on the rise, Asher’s death felt alarming. The Good Doctor had the opportunity to provide a gay, Jewish character with a healthy relationship and a happy ending, but instead decided to kill him off for dramatic purposes.

‘The Good Doctor’ Seems to Have More Heartbreak in Store

With the audience still reeling from Asher’s death, it was surprising to learn that even more hardships would be in store for these characters. The latest episode airing on May 14 will bring back the beloved character Dr. Claire Browne (Antonia Thomas). Claire left the show after Season 4 but popped up again in Season 5 for two episodes. However, instead of being a happy reunion, a sneak peek at that episode reveals that Claire is going to be diagnosed with breast cancer. This only feels like one more harsh attack by the writers. Rather than bring back Claire as a friend to Shaun and update the viewers on what she’s achieved in her career since she left St. Bonaventure, she’ll be just another character whose well-being is defined by tragedy.

Aside from health afflictions, viewers have also noted the many distressful elements taking place in Season 7. The once stalwart, rule-follower Dr. Glassman decided in Episode 7 to unethically treat a former patient (a drug-addicted young woman who reminds him of his dead daughter, Maddie). And Shaun and Lea are confronted with the worry that their son, Steve, might also be on the autism spectrum. Although there have been a few moments of lightheartedness (Dr. Jordan Allen and Dr. Jared Kulu forming a friendship, Morgan and Park getting engaged, etc.), characters have mostly been facing an onslaught of traumatic events in the series’ final season.

Obviously, The Good Doctor is not a comedy, and it has never been a show that feels particularly upbeat. But there has always been an undercurrent of hope running through the entire series. From the very first episode and throughout his journey as a physician, Shaun has faced innumerable battles and has come out ahead because of his capabilities that partially stem from his neurodivergence. Viewers have never doubted that Shaun and his co-workers would be able to save the day. The final season of the series should have been a triumphant look at how far the characters have come and how much they’ve grown. Instead, the audience is holding its breath while waiting to see what other tragedies are going to befall these characters before their stories are wrapped up for good. Here’s hoping the last two episodes in the series offer much more joy (and a lot less heartbreak).

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