Twenty years ago, Malcolm in the Middle was a mainstay on television. It was a single-camera comedy series that followed a dysfunctional working-class family and starred Frankie Muniz in the lead role as Malcolm, a child prodigy. The ensemble cast included Bryan Cranston and Jane Kaczmarek as Malcolm’s parents, Hal and Lois.
It was a show that I watched with my friends and family.
So, what’s the latest series like? Well, it appears life is still unfair..
This four-episode limited revival, which dropped on Hulu (and Hulu on Disney+) on April 10, 2026, brings back the original magic with Frankie Muniz as Malcolm, Bryan Cranston as the ever-optimistic Hal, and Jane Kaczmarek as the formidable Lois. Nearly 20 years after the original series ended, it feels like no time has passed — except now the kids are grown, Malcolm has a daughter, and the family dysfunction has evolved into even wilder, more relatable territory.
The premise is pure Malcolm: After years of keeping his distance to build a stable life for himself and his daughter, Malcolm gets pulled back into the family vortex for Hal and Lois’s 40th wedding anniversary. What follows is a rapid-fire barrage of slapstick, awkward family revelations, gross-out humor, and surprisingly touching moments about growing up, parenting, and the unbreakable (if exhausting) bonds of family.
The cast chemistry is electric. Cranston steals scenes as the aging but still manic Hal — his physical comedy and wild energy are peak form. Muniz slips back into Malcolm’s exasperated genius with ease, while Kaczmarek’s Lois remains the unstoppable force of nature we love (and fear). The brothers (Reese, Dewey — with a recast that works surprisingly well — and Francis) bring their distinct flavors of chaos, and the whole ensemble feels lived-in and authentic.
I found the end of the first series particularly hilarious, but I won’t spoil.
The show keeps the signature fourth-wall breaks, fast-paced editing, and irreverent tone, but adds emotional depth around adulthood, legacy, and what happens when the “genius” kid becomes the reluctant adult trying to escape the cycle.
Five stars out of five from me. You know what to do.