A Journey of self-reflection, a journey to find spiritual enlightenment and the everlasting dream to find God, these are all infused into “Ramy” the HULU Show that has returned for its 3rd Season after giving us insights inside the mind of a fist generation Egyptian American who is guiding his life in New Jersey with a family that raised him religiously in a country where being Muslim comes at a lot of eye-raises and how he tries to find God is what Ramy does beautifully.

Wholesome, and gut-wrenching to see Ramy try and try and try to find something that’ll make him whole but fail every time resulting him in hurting people, he cares about is what all the 3 Seasons have in common. Season 3 has just aired recently on HULU with 10 Episodes of 34 minutes average runtime. Here’s the review for Season 3 for Ramy.

After Season 2, a recently divorced Ramy is trying to navigate life by trying to get more into the jewelry business with his Uncle Naseem while his family continues to be miserable with his parents now delivering for Instacart together and Dena is interning in a Law Firm and will soon be giving the exam for the Bar.

The 10 Episodic journey of Season 3 of Ramy is not normal. All 10 Episodes are full of rich content that sometimes raises your eyebrows and some even make you worry about the mental condition of the characters some Episodes are just super weird.

Ramy, who is still in search of God now wants to earn money by any means necessary and he does anything to do it, even if it means going to Israel which is very questionable behavior.

READRamy Season 3 Ending Explained | Hulu

With time, Ramy starts to become a whole new person which is a downgrade of the real Ramy we’ve seen before and this continues until his dog Boomer dies, for which Ramy was supposed to be a guardian and towards the end of the last Episode, a revelation comes.

Final Verdict: 4/5

“Ramy Season 3 has taken the bar up by a significant number. With Episodes that gross you out, weird you out, and then make you smile Ramy still continues to make us love the show and that is a huge feat”.


 

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"I'm just a humble cinephile with a knack for stringing words together. My reviews may not be as fancy as "The Grand Budapest Hotel" but they'll give you a good idea of whether a movie is worth the ticket price. I may not be a "Casablanca" of criticism, but I'll always give you my honest opinion. So join me on this journey of cinematic discovery, it's sure to be "One for the Ages."

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