Warning! This review contains spoilers for episode 4 of She-Hulk: Attorney at Law.

In its fourth week, nearly midway through its run, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law may have premiered its strongest episode to date. “Is This Not Real Magic?” continues the show’s fun case-of-the-week storytelling as Wong hires Jen to sue a brash stage magician named Donny Blaze for unauthorized use of the Mystic Arts. Their only witness is a party girl called Madisynn, who Blaze banished to a demonic dimension for his audience’s entertainment, forcing her to make a Faustian bargain before being transported into Wong’s living room.

Scripted by Melissa Hunter, “Is This Not Real Magic?” settles into the episodic format of the show more comfortably than ever. This installment follows one storyline focused on Jen’s law career and another concurrent storyline focused on her messy personal life before bringing the two together in a fun-filled, action-packed finale.

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While working on Wong’s case, Jen creates a dating profile in her human form and only gets a handful of matches. This leads to a series of painfully relatable first dates. One guy just wants to talk about how much he can lift. One guy prattles on and on about his own boring life, calling himself “a New Yorker, through and through” despite having only lived in the Big Apple for 14 months, then zones out and glues to his phone when Jen tells him about her superpowers and her successful law career, then leaves her to pay the bar tab. While spending a Friday night alone, buried in her work, Jen reluctantly creates a new dating profile as She-Hulk and suddenly matches with every eligible bachelor in Los Angeles.

Jen takes a selfie in She-Hulk episode 4

Unlike last week’s episode, whose storylines were only tangentially related to each other, the A-plot and the B-plot of “Is This Not Real Magic?” actually collide with one another. When Donny Blaze’s mystical antics finally go too far and Wong needs the help of his superhuman lawyer to kick some demonic pests out of his dimension, he can’t get in touch with Jen because she’s finally on a successful date. Just as she’s back at her apartment with a good-looking doctor who actually listens to her, Jen is pulled through a portal to help Wong fight an army of winged demons at a magic show.

“Is This Not Real Magic?” is arguably the funniest She-Hulk episode yet. Hunter’s script gets plenty of laughs out of Jen trying to distinguish the difference between the magic that Wong uses to keep the universe in balance and the magic that Blaze uses to entertain drunk people. It also fits in a ton of hilarious fourth wall breaks during Jen’s ill-fated attempts to get on the dating scene: “Is there anything worse than dating in your 30s?” There’s a great running gag of Wong binge-watching The Sopranos and Madisynn spoiling every major plot point for him. Wong (or “Wongers,” as she calls him) makes for a hilarious deadpan reactionary foil to Madisynn’s loudmouthed, drunken antics.

Wong and Madisynn watch TV in She-Hulk episode 4

Tatiana Maslany is still anchoring the series with an impeccable lead performance. She does a great job of balancing the nuance of Jen’s duality with the hilarity of an everywoman who feels like the whole world is against her (and isn’t wrong). But she’s also surrounded by hysterical supporting players. Benedict Wong once again proves that his comedic abilities are as sharp as his dramatic abilities with a portrayal of Wong that leans into the sitcom silliness. The actor brings the same knowing wink to Wong’s mystical gravitas that he brought to his guest spot as former Countdown contestant “Prime” in The I.T. Crowd. Patty Guggenheim gives a scene-stealing turn as Madisynn with soon-to-be fan-favorite Madisynn-isms like describing an alternate reality as a “diff dimensh.”

The show’s pre-emptive self-awareness continues to impress. Jen says that having Wong around is like giving the show “Twitter armor for a week.” The She-Hulk writers keep evolving Jen’s relationship with the audience. This week, she breaks the fourth wall to cope with loneliness. When she’s alone on Friday night, she enjoys the company of the viewer. When her date can’t wait to leave her apartment the morning after a seemingly successful date, she confides in the audience.

Jen carries her date in She-Hulk episode 4

Director Kat Coiro captures the standard coverage of a single-camera sitcom that puts a focus on the dialogue without too many visual frills, but each episode still has a bunch of interesting shots. She takes the camera in and out of mystical portals. Jen is seen swiping through a series of dating profiles from behind her phone screen. Coiro also has a keen eye for little details, like Jen’s green and purple highlighters.

The episode’s cliffhanger ending finally introduces the main conflict of the series. Supervillain influencer Titania has trademarked the name “She-Hulk” and is suing Jen for using it. The most compelling conflict that the protagonist of a legal procedural can face is finding themselves in legal trouble. The most interesting case a TV lawyer can take on is their own. Like Jimmy McGill before her, Jen will have to use her whip-smart lawyering to defend herself in court (or possibly recruit the services of Nelson and Murdock).

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