Best TV Reboots and Revivals (Since 2000)
Everything old can be new again with the right approach. At least, that's what television executives across broadcast and cable networks and streaming platforms hope. After all, there is already a proven built-in audience for series that came and went years ago, and sometimes the fans of those shows are actively clamoring for more.
So, it should be no surprise that as the volume of new television shows continues to creep up (hitting a record high 559 original scripted, English-language series alone in 2021), the number of reboots and revivals among those series also continues to grow. The question for many executives, writers, and producers seems not to be, should we return to this previous world, but rather, when and how?
Rebooting a television series means keeping the original premise and tone of a previous series intact for a new iteration, but creating brand new characters and story arcs, sometimes including a new setting and time period. Sometimes these series are also called remakes.
A revival is a series that picks up the same characters and world from the original series but tells new stories with them, meeting them at a new point in their lives. Sometimes revival series are also called continuation series, depending on the timeframe that has passed between the end of the original and the start of the return.
Using the word "reimagining" to describe a series is supposed to signify that other material from the previous series is the source material for the new version, but often, the Powers That Be just seem to just like it better and use it colloquially, loosening the definition.
It all may be a slippery slope. And that doesn't even take into account spin-offs and prequels!
Here, Metacritic highlights the best scripted, live-action reboots and revivals since 2000, ranked by Metascore. It should be noted that if a series is listed as a new season of the same original show on our website, the Metascore listed below is for its first revival season, not the series overall. And yes, we call out which series are reboots and which are revivals!
(tied at #17)
revival of Arrested Development (Fox, 2003-06)
After Fox canceled Arrested Development in 2006, Netflix ended up reviving the joke-heavy comedy for two seasons, the first of which premiered in 2013, utilizing a new format. The first revival season, or Season 4 of the series overall, allows each core family member from the central Bluth family to take the spotlight in an episode, which means events are often repeated throughout the season, just seen from different points of view. Michael (Jason Bateman) is on a mission throughout the season to get his family to sign away their life rights so he can produce a movie about them, but naturally everyone has so much going on and no one truly listens to him, so things go awry quickly, including him moving into his son's dorm room and the two of them dating the same woman (played by guest star Isla Fisher). This season got a "remix" version that set events in chronological order to be more in line with the previous seasons and the fifth and so far final one that eventually followed. Despite coming together six years after Season 4, the fifth season picks up moments after it but centers on a bigger mystery of who killed Lucille 2 (Liza Minnelli), putting all of the Bluths under a microscope once again. The first revival season was nominated for three Emmys, including Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for Bateman.
“It gets off to a slow start and then takes a while for the whole enterprise to get up to speed. At about the third episode, enough of a foundation has been set that the jokes start to come more easily and more quickly.” —Rob Owen, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette