As Abed Nadir says, this is starting to feel like a bottle episode.
In this time of quarantine and social distancing, it might be beneficial to look back at the very best bottle episodes of television. As we all settle down in lock down, some of our favorite characters have already mastered the art of dealing with drama and character nuances while stuck in single locations. Itâs time to learn from the masters, yeah?
Since there are many types of bottle episodes, weâve broken them down by situations, just in case in the midst of all this, a slug-like demon possesses you and your group needs to figure out how best to determine whoâs about to slaughter everyone, or you just need to know how to handle awkward, passive aggressive family dinners.
Family Dinners

Fleabag, Season 2 Episode 1
Fleabag meets up with her family for the first time in a year at an engagement dinner for her father and godmother. The episode takes place for 26 minutes seated at the dinner table at a fancy restaurant, with every character â Dad, Godmother, Claire, Martin, Fleabag, and The Priest â in attendance, their issues with each other largely ignored under the guise of passive aggression until it ends in bloodshed. Itâs not a fun family dinner, but Phoebe Waller-Bridgeâs tightly controlled script provides effective entertainment for a seemingly innocuous dinner party. –Katey Stoetzel

Please Like Me, âDegustationâ
Josh takes his divorced parents out for an extravagant 15-course meal as something nice to do. As each course is set down on the table and drinks flow loosely, Josh, Rose, and Alan take time to reconnect after four seasons of intense family drama. Some of their conversations are light â Alanâs impression of an emu is a particular noteworthy occurence â while some topics hit the hardcore issues theyâve faced throughout the series, such as Roseâs bipolar disorder and Joshâs recent breakup. Itâs a time for easy laughs and equally harder admissions, broken up by the wait staff appearing for another course. For a show thatâs all about the meals we sit down for, âDegustationâ really gets at the heart of what a family meal is all about. The episodes following this one make this episode even more sobering, but for that, Iâd suggest watching the entire series. –Katey Stoetzel
The Monsterâs Inside

The X-Files, âIceâ
In an excellent homage to The Thing, Mulder and Scullyâs new working relationship is tested early in season one as they head out to investigate a recently discovered parasite thatâs responsible for the deaths of a geological drilling team. Confined to the small laboratory with three other scientists, a dog, and the helicopter pilot, the episode follows a pretty standard game of âwhoâs possessed now?â Itâs effective, though. Ultimately, itâs the amount of trust between Mulder and Scully that takes center stage this episode, considering itâs still early season one. –Katey Stoetzel

Doctor Who, âMidnightâ
Oh, what a creepy, creepy episode. Doctor Who may be a light-hearted sci-fi drama most of the time, but âMidnightâ is an example of the show at its most terrifying. Upon first glimpse, the episode itself seems fairly innocent â The Doctor takes a pleasure cruise on a planet called Midnight, where the geological makeup is full of diamonds, but deadly to be exposed to. It turns nightmarish when a mysterious knocking comes from outside the space shuttle cruise ship. When it enters the confines of the ship, it possesses one of the passengers and begins mimicking human speech and action. The Doctor must try to convince the rest of the passengers to remain calm, even as the very base of human emotions takes control of them: fear. –Katey Stoetzel
Outbreak!

Fringe, âWhat Lies Belowâ
This perhaps might be a little close to reality, but it does serve as an excellent reminder for why being in the office is a bad idea right now! A fast-acting virus gets let loose in an office building, causing a building-wide quarantine. Unfortunately, Peter and Olivia have already entered to investigate the first death. The episode stokes that outbreak fear well, with a little extra sci-fi drama â the virus itself wants to break free from quarantine to infect the outside world, causing the infected to take drastic measures to get out. The stakes are high with two of our main characters inside, exposed, but the mystery of Peter checks another box in Somethingâs Not Right as the outbreak brings back memories for Walter. –Katey Stoetzel
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Bones, âThe Man in the Fallout Shelterâ
Definitely on the lighter side of outbreak scenarios, the season one episode traps all of our characters in the lab after Agent Booth brings a body in for Brennanâs inspection. Hodges and Zach barely break the skull open before releasing a toxin from the body, forcing emergency procedures to take place. Oh, itâs also Christmas. Itâs a wonderful episode that sets aside the case of the week â though it is a fairly moving one â to focus on character interactions and relationships. –Katey Stoetzel
Talking, talking, talking

Parks and Recreation, âLeslie and Ronâ
This entire episode hinges entirely upon the strength of Leslie and Ron’s friendship and it doesn’t disappoint. Years after Leslie (Amy Poehler) left the Parks and Rec branch for bigger and better things, her friendship with Ron (Nick Offerman) has deteriorated to the point of not speaking to each other. Locked inside their old office for ten hours, they’re forced to finally communicate and get to the root of why their friendship went south. Ron, who doesn’t like talking about his feelings, admits that he felt hurt being left behind while everyone else moved on.
Leslie, on the other hand, was angry with Ron for not revealing why he’d quit the department to begin working with a company that tore down the beloved home of Leslieâs best friend, Ann (Rashida Jones) â a home that sits next to the park project that was at the center of the showâs premise in early seasons. The two realize that their lack of communication hurt their friendship a lot more than it should have and work to restore what they once had. Ultimately, this bottle episode is a beautiful reminder of the development Leslie and Ron have had over the course of the show and an example of how the deepest of friendships can always be revived if thereâs a strong enough foundation. —Mae Abdulbaki

Please Like Me, âScrogginâ
This is one of those bottle episodes that doesnât take place in a single location. Instead, âScrogginâ is a pivotal episode in the middle of Please Like Meâs second season, when Josh takes his mother Rose on a hike through remote Tasmania as a way to cope with a friendâs recent suicide. The episode features only Josh and Rose, solidifying it as a bottle episode. On their hike, the two fight the forces of nature (though they never cross a tasmanian devil, much to Joshâs disappointment), smoke some weed, reflect on Gingerâs suicide, and confront each of their feelings about Roseâs own suicide attempts. Itâs expertly written and acted, and provides the type of emotional catharsis that says five days out in the wilderness isnât going to fix things; perhaps nothing will, but at least some conversation was had. –Katey Stoetzel
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Last Words

Game of Thrones, âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ
Theyâre on the brink of war with the dead. âA Knight of the Seven Kingdoms,â the best episode of Game of Thronesâ final season, sees a lot of downtime for our characters, who have traveled far and wide over eight seasons only to be thrown together in a fight for humanity. On this last night together before taking on the Night Kingâs army, grievances are put aside, relationships kindled, secrets revealed, and an honor well past its due is finally served. Within the halls of Winterfell, humanity won before the war even started. (And letâs face it, by the conclusion of the very next episode, most of this fantastic groundwork from a character standpoint is moot anyway, so letâs just leave it at this). –Katey Stoetzel
Time Conundrums

Lost, âThe Constantâ
How do you tell a love story over seven years, thousands of miles, and with one half of the partnership fluctuating across time? You make âThe Constant.â Itâs a bit complicated for a traditional bottle episode, but this Desmond-centric tale of time travel is a classic character-focused episode of Lost. Trapped on the boat thought to be their saviors, Desmond fights for survival as his mind jumps between present day and the past, searching for answers but also for an anchor, his constant â Penny. No matter how much sci-fi jargon Dr. Faraday spouts at us to explain whatâs happening, this is a love story through and through, the kind where belief and faith are at the center and a simple promise of keeping the same phone number for seven years without explanation is the deepest expression of love. –Katey Stoetzel

The Flash, âEnter Flashtimeâ
This episode of The Flash is probably the closest the show has ever gotten to a traditional bottle episode. âEnter Flashtimeâ is unique in that a large part of the narrative action takes place within the span of seconds. After a nuclear bomb detonates, Barry (Grant Gustin) enters Flashtime â which is what happens when time seems to come to a standstill relative to Barryâs superspeed â to save Central City. The episode is incredibly high-stakes, suspenseful, and cleverly employs other speedsters like Jay Garrick (John Wesley Shipp) and Jesse Quick (Violett Beane) in what is her last appearance on The Flash. At the heart of the season four episode, however, is Barry and Irisâ relationship, with the episode further cementing their deep and powerful connection to each other and, more interestingly, Irisâ grounding ties to Barryâs powers. —Mae Abdulbaki

Legends of Tomorrow, “Here I Go Again”
When Zari (Tala Ashe) joined the Waverider, it took her quite a while to accept the fact that she may not be able to warp events to save her family from a tragic fate. In this Groundhog Day-style episode, Zari is the only one trapped in a time loop, forced to repeat the same events in the hour leading up to an explosion that blows up the Waverider and its residents. Itâs perhaps the only episode of the superhero series set completely on the ship. As she investigates the conundrum, Zari winds up learning more and more about the people sheâs come to call friends, as well as her place on the ship and in history. The lesson she ultimately learns is that issues canât be resolved through taking shortcuts and, sometimes, the hardest thing to do is accept the fact that time canât be changed for personal reasons. The episode is Legends of Tomorrow at its absolute best and cements Zari as a true member of the team, all while brilliantly developing her character and plot. —Mae Abdulbaki
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Doctor Who, “Heaven Sent”
Doctor Who has had its fair share of dark episodes, but âHeaven Sentâ takes it a step further to explore the complexities of grief. The season nine episode takes place immediately following the death of the Doctorâs companion, Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman). Peter Capaldiâs iteration of The Doctor is teleported to a remote castle where heâs chased by a shadowy figure seeking the truth. It takes a long time for him to figure out that heâs trapped in a pseudo time loop that sees him repeating the same actions, helpless and with no escape in sight. As he cycles through the stages of grief â stuck in a prison of his own making â The Doctor eventually finds clarity in repetition, hope in despair, and solace in Claraâs memory, gone but not forgotten. Itâs not only a rare bottle episode of Doctor Who, but an outstanding one-man showcase of Capaldiâs talents. —Mae Abdulbaki
Board Games

Community, âRemedial Chaos Theoryâ
How else do you throw a housewarming party if not for a game of Yahtzee! But only at Abed and Troyâs housewarming party does it turn into hypotheticals on the existence of alternate timelines based on who leaves the room to get the pizza. Itâs the episode that spawned âthe darkest timelineâ (re: reality?) and the gif of Donald Glover running into a room thatâs literally on fire. Itâs got great jokes and great payoffs, but most importantly, it concludes with the one truth we always knew: Jeffâs kind of a bummer. –Katey Stoetzel

Community, âAdvanced Dungeons and Dragonsâ
Another bottle episode of Community that takes place entirely in the study room, but this time everyoneâs on the same side. Sort of. In an attempt to cheer up new friend Neal, the study group invites Neal to a game of Dungeons and Dragons, despite most of them never having played before. Abed acts as the dungeon master and the voice of plot for the episode, with Danny Pudi providing remarkable skill at nailing wicked fast dialogue. Everyoneâs getting along, until Pierce comes along, jealous he wasnât invited to the game. Even though the episode is just the group sitting around a table, sound effects mimic a fantasy adventure. –Katey Stoetzel
Countdowns

Breaking Bad, âFlyâ
Thereâs a fly in the lab, and Walt needs to kill it before it contaminates the meth. Suffering from insomnia and paranoia, Walt and Jesse spend the entire episode trying to kill the fly, even as theyâre on deadline to produce a certain amount of meth for Gus. Itâs a pretty classic bottle episode where two characters are stuck in a room together, both of them with secrets and nothing but time to air them out. –Katey Stoetzel

Firefly, “Out of Gas”
Fireflyâs TV run may have been short-lived, but âOut of Gasâ is a fantastic reminder of what made the show so good. The episode is another one that takes place solely on a ship. After an explosion leaves Zoe (Gina Torres) injured and a fire set to suck the rest of the oxygen from the Serenity, Mal (Nathan Fillion) orders everyone to leave and take the shuttles. He stays behind in hopes that another ship picks up their distress signal, only to be met with disaster once another captain attempts to take over. A bulk of the episode employs the use of flashbacks to tell the story of how the crew came to join the Serenity, all while the suspense in the present threatens to destroy the very thing that helped bring them together. The episode is a love letter to the characters and the strength of their relationships, serving as a reminder that loyalty and camaraderie is what holds them together. —Mae Abdulbaki
Investigation Station

Community, âCooperative Calligraphyâ
Annieâs lost her purple pen. She believes someone in the study group has stolen it. Abed doesnât want to do a bottle episode, but Jeff declares they are anyway. In true Community form, âCooperative Calligraphyâ defines itself as a bottle episode through both Abed and Jeff as weâre stuck in the study room witnessing the study group lose their collective minds over who has Annieâs purple pen. Secrets are revealed (including who took the pen, though itâs a blink-and-youâll-miss-it occurrence), the group strips all the way down, Britta expresses more pseudo-activism, Troy only carries a pillow in his backpack, and Pierce is still Peirce. There are many bottle episodes in Community (two more on this list, even), but âCooperative Calligraphyâ was the first, and for sure, the best. –Katey Stoetzel

Brooklyn Nine-Nine, âThe Boxâ
Sterling K. Brown guest stars as a suspect being investigated by Detective Jake Peralta and Captain Raymond Holt. The entire episode practically takes place inside the interrogation room as Jake and Holt come up with ways to get Brownâs Philip Davidson to confess to murder. As each tactic gets more ridiculous and Jake and Holt fall victim to their own schemes (the best one is when Holt goes on a tangent about the medical community co-opting the term âdoctorâ), the episode ends in a shouting match between Jake and Davidson just as time runs out for the detectives to keep Davidson in custody. –Katey Stoetzel

Supernatural, âBabyâ
This is a bit of a weird one, at least if youâre not familiar with Supernatural. On the show, Deanâs 1967 Chevy Impala (which he often refers to as âbabyâ) is practically its own character. Thematically, it operates as Dean and Sam Winchesterâs home for eight and a half seasons before the brothers start living at the Men of Letters bunker. In season 11, the Impala got an episode all on its own, with events unfolding through the carâs perspective. For such a ridiculous concept, it works pretty effectively. We get all the same story beats of any supernatural investigation, but we also get to see for the first time the moments in between, the quiet reflections on the open road, and the deeper, more profound bonding of two brothers whoâve been to hell and back but are still able to find comfort in their one true home. –Katey Stoetzel

Friends, “The One Where No One’s Ready”
As Ross (David Schwimmer) works to get the rest of his friends â Rachel (Jennifer Aniston), Monica (Courteney Cox), Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow), Chandler (Matthew Perry), and Joey (Matt LeBlanc) â out the door in time to get to a black-tie event for his job, he becomes increasingly frustrated with everything that keeps getting in the way of them getting dressed and ready to leave. This may be one of the only episodes of the showâs entire ten-season run that doesnât include a scene at their beloved coffee shop, Central Perk. âThe One Where No Oneâs Readyâ is cleverly set up and functions like a staged play, with characters entering and exiting rooms at a quick pace, all while in one setting. And, while Friends has a ton of incredibly memorable moments, quite a few of them come from this episode, including Joey walking in wearing all of Chandlerâs clothes. —Mae Abdulbaki

One Day at a Time, “Not Yet”
âNot Yetâ is a tearjerker of an episode. After Lydia (Rita Moreno) suffers a stroke, Penelope (Justina Machado) and the rest of the family maintain their bedside vigil, hoping that Lydia will make a full recovery. While her family tearfully share their stories, their regrets, and their deep love for her, Lydia herself has an out-of-body experience that puts her in a kind of limbo. Does she heed the call of death and join her beloved Berto or does she stay behind and continue living? While the season two finale is punctuated with lovely and heartfelt flashbacks, itâs mostly set inside Lydiaâs hospital room, with each character getting a distinct and emotional moment by the Alvarez matriarchâs side. The episode is incredibly deep, beautiful and moving, mining the strength of the relationships Lydia has cultivated with everyone â including the often tumultuous relationship she has with Penelope â to great effect. —Mae Abdulbaki
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