Dallas Morning News' Scores
- TV
For 152 reviews, this publication has graded:
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59% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average TV Show review score: 68
| Highest review score: | No Direction Home: Bob Dylan | |
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| Lowest review score: | One Tree Hill: Season 1 |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 102 out of 102
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Mixed: 0 out of 102
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Negative: 0 out of 102
102
tv
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Manuel Mendoza
With the silly, overwrought Charmed, the network of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dawson's Creek and Felicity is pushing its luck. [7 Oct 1998, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 17, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
Wedged between Friends and Frasier in Jesse's primo time slot, Daddio has a shot at hit-dom. Its chances would be improved if the producers can find a way to increase the show's chuckles-to-groans ratio. [23 March 2000]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Nov 26, 2019 -
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Ed Bark
Friday's premiere episode is marginally tolerable and includes a cute little scene in which Danny turns a dance class for little girls into a football game. But a second episode sent for preview is a big, broad step backward. [28 Sept 2001, p.3C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 21, 2015 -
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Ed Bark
Bland at first but better next week, this new spring collection of plainclothes cops has an outside chance to fit in and maybe even wear well. [23 March 2000]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Nov 21, 2019 -
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Ed Bark
Mr. Cohen is better served - and better disguised - as the suited, shorthaired Borat. He's reminiscent of Peter Sellers' Inspector Clouseau, a painfully sincere bumbler who gets smashed on wine with the Mississippians on Sunday night before addressing an Oklahoma city council meeting next week. [18 July 2004, p.3]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 12, 2013 -
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Ed Bark
Mr. Morrow plays the lead character with no discernible flair or charisma, making even by-the-book Joe Friday seem like Willy Wonka or something. [23 Jan 2005]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jul 8, 2013 -
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Tom Maurstad
The macho-vigilante ethos of the show quickly grows tiresome. But with scene after scene of the Chief's righteous indignation - uttering lines such as "I don't care how much it costs, people out there are dying" - The District can be silly fun. [7 Oct 2000, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 14, 2013 -
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Ed Bark
The overall effect is dispiriting and off-putting. Maybe Mr. Carter knows where he's going with all this. It's doubtful, however, that many viewers will have the will to go with him. [8 Oct 1999, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 9, 2015 -
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Manuel Mendoza
Whether intended or not, this emphasis on serial killers and other antisocial freaks indulges a morbid fascination with sicko behavior at least as much as it celebrates smart and dedicated crime fighters. [22 Sep 2004]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jul 17, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
An unfunny formula sitcom with one so-bad-it's-good production number to its credit. [8 Oct 2000, p.7C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 14, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
The six-week series premieres tonight on ABC, a network so desperate it has stooped to ripping off Fox, home of the infamous Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire? [25 Mar 2002, p.12C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted May 14, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
While a little more crude and silly than Malcolm, Tucker isn't nearly as imaginative. [2 Oct 2000]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 23, 2015 -
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Manuel Mendoza
It is neither visually nor narratively compelling. Since the story didn't make sense in the first place, filming a literal (not literate) version of The Shining only makes its shortcomings stand out. [27 Apr 1997, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted May 8, 2021 -
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Manuel Mendoza
Its first cases ... play out cheaply as setups for one-liners, only a few of which land squarely. [3 Oct 2004]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jul 23, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
More problematic than the dramatic license taken by creator Gary Scott Thompson (The Fast and the Furious) is the lack of a compelling story. [22 Sept 2003, p.12E]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Mar 16, 2014 -
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Tom Maurstad
Judging by the pilot, it seems a safe bet that soon enough everyone will have slept with everyone else on the show. But unless the storytelling evens out, there won't be anyone watching.- Dallas Morning News
- Read full review
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Ed Bark
Mr. D'Onofrio is the best reason to watch Criminal Intent, particularly when he's in full metal insult mode...The show otherwise is weak from a story standpoint. Clues fall into place with remarkable, sometimes unbelievable precision. Wrongdoers are too easily broken down or duped during interrogations. The criminals' minds frankly aren't all that interesting anyway. And unlike its two fellow travelers, there are no palate-cleansing trials in Criminal Intent. Episodes instead end in abrupt arrests. [30 Sept 2001, p.3]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Feb 3, 2014 -
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Manuel Mendoza
The insights, the connections to Jane Austen's Emma are lost in this watered-down version. As if! [19 Sept 1996, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted May 20, 2014 -
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Ed Bark
From the Earth to the Moon, your 12-hour, Tom Hanks-piloted paean to NASA, goes boldly where we've gone again and again. And again. It's kinda like Mom and Dad surveying the old two-story after the last of their five kids has flown the nest. "Honey, do we really need all this space?" [5 Apr 1998, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 25, 2019 -
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Ed Bark
Occasionally hypnotic but too often implausible or incomprehensible. [9 Jan 2005]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 2, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
Yes, this series is as cornball as it sounds. [3 Apr 1994]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jul 23, 2014 -
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Manuel Mendoza
It pulls its punches and takes cheap shots. [19 June 1999, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 4, 2015 -
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Manuel Mendoza
But by the third episode, Maximum Bob turns into minimal entertainment. The plot contrivances become strained beyond repair, and the farcical edge is blunted. [4 Aug 1998, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 5, 2014 -
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Ed Bark
Plagued by pedestrian scripts and mostly nondescript characters, it slogs from night to night without nearly enough suspense or consequences. [2 Apr 2000]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Aug 6, 2014 -
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- Critic Score
Ms. Garth is even less appealing, forced to carry the weight of the show's many pop-culture references. It calls for a referendum ending all Wang Chung punch lines. [20 Sept 2002, p.6C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Feb 24, 2013 -
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Reviewed by
Tom Maurstad
The Trouble With Normal is one of those television shows that makes it hard to believe that the networks ever turn down any idea. The premise of this new ABC sitcom is that people suffering from mental illness are funny...OK, that's stating it a little harshly, but only just a little. [6 Oct 2000, p.4C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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Manuel Mendoza
With its cheap look and gross-out sensibility, Kevin Smith's 1994 movie Clerks wasn't for everyone...A new animated version for ABC isn't for anyone. [31 May 2000]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Dec 18, 2019 -
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Ed Bark
This low-rent knockoff of the estimable 1960 movie is a sleep--inducing, cliche-choked, rope-a-dopey slowpoke starring a buncha no-names substituting for the likes of Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson and James Coburn. We haven't seen markdowns of this magnitude since Sears fire-saled its entire line of Johnny Miller menswear. [3 Jan 1998]- Dallas Morning News
Posted Jun 6, 2014 -
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Manuel Mendoza
The Big Easy on TV is the opposite of The Big Easy on film. The series has no texture, no thrills, no darkness. It's a flat canvas drawn on by people with more money but no more imagination than the producers of late-night action series starring Julie Strain or Andrew Stevens. It's Silk Stalkings with accents. The one thing TV's The Big Easy shares with its movie predecessor is a convoluted plot that's tied up too easily at the end of the premiere. But it has none of the edgy mood of the film. [10 Aug 1996, p.1C]- Dallas Morning News
Posted May 29, 2014 -
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Ed Bark
The only thing keeping Luis from a flat-out F-grade is its employment of a multi-ethnic cast. That's commendable on the face of it, although under these circumstances all involved might be better off unseen.- Dallas Morning News
- Posted Aug 19, 2015
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Reviewed by