Chicago Fire Season 13 Premiere Starts With a Bang – But Quiet Is Better
Chicago Fire returns to NBC as Season 12 addresses major cast changes and turmoil at Firehouse 51. But the premiere episode is best when it’s quiet.
The Chicago Fire Season 12 premiere is somewhat overshadowed by everything that’s happened off-screen. The NBC drama dealt with the absence of actor Taylor Kinney while he attended to personal matters, while between seasons it was announced that two more stars would be leaving the series permanently. Plus, the entertainment industry strikes resulted in an extended hiatus for most of television. As such, when One Chicago fans tune into Season 12, they’re thinking as much about behind the scenes as they are the on-screen cliffhangers.
For those who don’t remember: the fate of veteran firefighter Randall “Mouch” McHolland was once again left up in the air, while paramedic Sylvie Brett was shocked to see ex-boyfriend Matthew Casey on her doorstep, with an engagement ring in hand. Kinney’s return to Chicago Fire was confirmed in November 2023, so Kelly Severide’s status is no longer a question mark, but “Barely Gone” is an example of writers doing their best to write around (and toward) what an audience already knows — and they do a pretty good job.
There’s been a six-month time jump for the entire One Chicago franchise, so “Barely Gone” makes the decision to answer every lingering question fans have in under five minutes. The almost standard show open — checking in on Firehouse 51 before a call-out that starts the story of the week — is packed with character updates, including whether or not Mouch survived and if Brett accepted Casey’s proposal. In one sense, that feels like taking all the suspense out of the episode too early, racing through beats that could have been bigger. But it’s also an incredibly efficient way to catch viewers up, since the Season 11 finale that started all those plot threads aired half a year ago.
Longtime viewers know that Chicago Fire is no stranger to leaving viewers waiting between seasons. Series co-creator and now-former showrunner Derek Haas was an expert at setting up a massive, usually life-threatening cliffhanger to keep fans worrying over hiatus. Yet there’s so much on the table going into Season 12 that to space all those answers out would take up the whole premiere on its own, on top of the premiere also having to establish what the current season is going to look like. With that in mind, “Barely Gone” can be forgiven for feeling rushed a large portion of the time. When the episode is able to slow down, though, that’s when it shines and reminds viewers why the series has been so successful for so long.
The plots of the week are both familiar: a suspicious fire and Firehouse 51 having to deal with other firefighters that they don’t completely get along with. The former provides a good way to reintegrate Severide, who’s carved out a niche on the show (and in the whole fire department) as an arson investigator. Of course he’s going to be center stage in any suspicious fire plot, and the episode even somewhat explains Severide’s going AWOL in Season 11 — a plot point mandated by Kinney’s extended absence. It felt out of character for Severide to ghost his wife Stella Kidd at the time, but “Barely Gone” reframes that by Stella pointing out he’s getting in too deep with arson work. That makes more sense given his stubbornness and his potential to follow in his late father Benny’s footsteps. There’s still plenty for Stellaride shippers (including an episode-opening shower scene), yet the audience also gets to see them work on their relationship.
The series also has to address its two cast departures in the premiere. Rumors about Kara Killmer leaving Chicago Fire were circling for over a year before it was confirmed that Season 12 will be her final season, and it was subsequently announced that Alberto Rosende had chosen to depart, too. One of the downsides of the entertainment news cycle is that fans often find out about actors leaving their favorite TV shows well before it happens — thus taking away from the surprise or feeling of the actual goodbye. One Chicago fans almost immediately predicted that Brett and Casey would get engaged as a way of writing Brett out, so that’s no shocker. But Rosende fares very well in his final scene as Blake Gallo, returning with little fanfare to say farewell to his now ex-colleagues, especially his best friends Violet Mikami and Darren Ritter. As with Kinney, “Barely Gone” finds an angle to turn Rosende’s status change into something positive. When Gallo starts talking excitedly about the new family he’s found, it’s the perfect way to send off a character whose defining bit of backstory was the family he lost.