Denver Post's Scores
- TV
For 300 reviews, this publication has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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35% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average TV Show review score: 72
| Highest review score: | Fargo: Season 2 | |
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| Lowest review score: | Rob: Season 1 |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 221 out of 221
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Mixed: 0 out of 221
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Negative: 0 out of 221
221
tv
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Joanne Ostrow
Rampling brings her primly authoritative presence and a stern look to the task. Her scenes with Hall crackle with tension.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Scott Bakula as Capt. Jonathan Archer is not as commanding a figure as some past captains. But his inexperience suits the prequel's tone. [26 Sep 2001]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 25, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Not only is it creepy, suspenseful and full of splendid special effects, veteran actors and fresh young faces, but it's laced with big thoughts about environmentalism and the future of the planet.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 24, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
We know the body convulsing on the floor of the grand foyer isn't really being electrocuted. And yet we get sucked into the suspense and the gore as the players express fear, anxiety and tearful protests against being the next to die. ABC's amalgam of drama, murder mystery, parlor game and elimination competition for money is a curious mishmash.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 24, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Now the novelty is wearing off, and the hour is edging toward vapidity. ... The story is too rooted in convention to be truly outrageous, too melodramatic to make it plausible as anything but goofy comedy. How long do we need to play along? [13 Oct 2005]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 20, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
As the lead character, actor Kevin James has a certain something. We just hope it's not contagious. [21 Sept 1998, p.G-05]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 20, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
CBS may have the most appealing nonscripted hour of the fall. [4 Sep 2001]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 19, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Long before Sept. 11, the standout of the fall TV season was an ambitious thriller about a counter-terrorist. ... It's even more captivating now that terrorist threats are a daily fact of life. [4 Nov 2001]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 18, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Will delight those who know a bit about the star-making machinery. It will tickle sports fans and entertain anyone in search of a decent adult comedy. [7 Aug 1996, p.G01]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 17, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Heather Paige Kent is endearing as Lydia DeLucca, a 32-year-old Italian Catholic from New Jersey, who breaks off her engagement to pursue her dream of going to college. [5 Oct 2000, p.E-03]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Viewers won't feel entertained so much as dismayed by the oddity. [5 Oct 2000, p.E-03]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
It is formulaic but built to last. Think of this expensive remake as 'Touched by a Kimble.'... The workmanlike hour continues to mine old themes of alienation, injustice and the search for truth. [5 Oct 2000, p.E-03]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Like the best TV shows, Ed has a profound point beneath its silliness. It seems it's always possible to return to Stuckeyville, the hometown we carry around inside, and see new possibilities. If we let go and embrace a magical dramedy that dares to dream, we may feel somehow ennobled. [5 Oct 2000, p.E-03]- Denver Post
Posted Jun 13, 2013 -
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- Denver Post
- Posted May 28, 2013
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Reviewed by
Joanne Ostrow
Part of what makes his series hilarious is the riotous pace and innovative comedic rhythms that sneak up on viewers. This distinctive style is as different from TV's old "Laverne & Shirley" model as third-wave ska is from Perry Como. [7 Nov 2004, p.F-15]- Denver Post
Posted May 26, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
The season's best new comedy - we're talking laugh-out-loud funny. [2 Nov 2003, p.F-14]- Denver Post
Posted May 26, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
This series won’t change the world, or even the world of TV comedy, but it is an intriguing diversion.- Denver Post
- Posted May 10, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Chronicling Cathy's journey, executive producers Darlene Hunt and Jenny Bicks (a cancer survivor) have so far taken her from denial to rage to bargaining and depression. Onward to acceptance, and to a satisfying conclusion.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Moody, dark yet at times poetic, this is TV made in the indie-film style, without pretense. Adult, premium-cable caliber without the visual excess.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 19, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
While uneven and not as immediately seductive as David Chase's 'The Sopranos,' Ball's Six Feet Under is a daring exploration on a theme, funny to creepy to plain weird. [3 June 2001, p.E-01]- Denver Post
Posted Apr 15, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Sadly, the story is mystifyingly botched, failing as it tries too hard to be an action-packed mystery of secret societies and Dan Brown-esque intrigue with a strange penchant for geek humor.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Mad Men remains a brilliant, perfectly designed and visually exciting series--one of the very best the medium has to offer--whether you take it at face value or find the experience of watching the TV series enriched by tracing the modern echoes.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
The horrors of war, the danger of shifting alliances and the anguish of intra-family rivalries raise the dramatic stakes, matched by the glorious visuals.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
A well constructed, masterfully written piece, Hannibal exceeds the "ick" factor of any crime procedural on the air.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 27, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Gritty and grim, The Shield takes the familiar genre to a new level of intensity, graphic violence, nudity and, not least, profanity. The vocabulary may shock some viewers; the casting will surprise others: Michael Chiklis plays the heavy, the corrupt cop at the center of The Shield. It's a riveting star turn. [12 Mar 2002, p.F05]- Denver Post
Posted Mar 19, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
The season's best new drama introduces a smart ensemble and immerses us in a tangle of conflicting viewpoints. The storytelling device, which occasionally backtracks in time, isn't distracting or forced. [29 Sept 2002, p.F-02]- Denver Post
Posted Mar 18, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Based on both content and time slot - between "Home Improvement" and "NYPD Blue" - Spin City is potentially the breakout hit of the season. [17 Sept 1996]- Denver Post
Posted Mar 17, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
All in all, its assured storytelling and fine performances give a worthy contemporary spin to a classic.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 15, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Laurie is a wonder. His drawn face, scraggly beard, hollowed eyes and gaunt body add an offbeat distinction to his dignified performance. His is a sinister quirkiness. [15 Nov 2004, p.F-01]- Denver Post
Posted Mar 11, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
Executive producer Melissa Rosenberg has crafted an off-putting start to a series that may have worked better in the Netherlands.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 1, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Plays to an older crowd with its by-the-numbers approach. [29 Sept 2003, p.F01]- Denver Post
Posted Feb 26, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
The direction by Susanna White is subtle, except for a too-frequent visual pun of kaleidoscopic, prism-like refractions to help us see that the world at the moment of Parade’s End is splintering into pieces. Cumberbatch pulls off the stoic-to-shell-shocked expressions of Tietjens, Hall is masterful in a demanding role and Clemens is suited to playing the fresh young thing.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 22, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Other than the unspooling of the ghost of policework past, Golden Boy is so formulaic as to be instantly forgettable.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 22, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
So far Grey's Anatomy is groping for a balance between over-the-top nuttiness and heartstring plucking drama; it lands awkwardly in the dram-edy category. If it would stop trying to be droll and ironic (this is no "Scrubs"), it just might make the cut. [27 March 2005, p.F01]- Denver Post
Posted Feb 20, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
A fun, intriguing new drama...Inspiration is allowed to take all sorts of liberties. Fortunately, the production values of the show are high and no attempts are made to portray aliens on screen, for instance. The director wisely lets us imagine an unexplained power source with a whirl of wind rather than cheap-looking spaceships or funny-looking men with antennae heads. [8 Sept 1993, p.1F]- Denver Post
Posted Feb 17, 2013 -
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Joanne Ostrow
The yin and yang of stardom are on display here: The footage from her in concert is breathtaking. The cliches from her interviews are cringe-inducing.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Zero Hour wants to be as brilliant as "Lost" but, sorry to say, feels more akin to the misfire "FlashForward."- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 8, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Much of the insanity that drove viewers to “hate-watch” the show in its first season has been scrubbed. Competence reigns. The results are mixed.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Deeply cynical about human beings as well as politics and almost gleeful in its portrayal of limitless ambition, House of Cards is a wonderfully sour take on power and corruption.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
The evolution of the couple's relationship is as engrossing as the strong-arm spy stuff.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
The plotting is intricate, the entire acting ensemble is first-rate.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Of course it's formulaic, but the cast is inviting and the formula works.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 8, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
Judging by the first two hours, Deception is not as seductive as "Revenge" and contains even more clunky acting and just as much melodramatic music.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 7, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
This is put-your-feet-up, pour-a-brandy television, a tasty import that's good company for a culture undergoing its own sometimes dizzying shifts.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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Joanne Ostrow
The new season contains more laugh-out-loud funny moments, the characters are well defined and the male characters get more prominence.- Denver Post
- Posted Dec 19, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
It would be naughty to call it dry. But the lack of personalities leaves the viewer groping for an angle. The overwhelming nature of the event begins to feel overwhelming on the couch, too.- Denver Post
- Posted Nov 19, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The goal is not an academic history but a backstage, groupie-eye view. While it's familiar territory for longtime Stones fans, it works.- Denver Post
- Posted Nov 14, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
It's a strange amalgam of behind-the-scenes imagining, video simulations, archival footage and patriotic odes to the military regarding a rather recent event.- Denver Post
- Posted Nov 9, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
As an immersive experience for viewers who wouldn't think of getting this close to war zones, the Witness films are amazing documents.- Denver Post
- Posted Nov 2, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The Girl, directed by Julian Jarrold, impeccably re-creates the film technology of the time. It also delivers a psychologically astute reading of one of Hollywood's more bizarre entanglements.- Denver Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
It's easy to get hooked on the drama's fast-paced, international intrigue and tony visuals (shot in London, Scotland and Morocco). It's almost enough to keep you from contemplating some of the more outrageous turns.- Denver Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
"Grey's" keeps the high-school analogy to itself. Emily Owens M.D. never stops making the too-obvious comparisons out loud.- Denver Post
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
What Nashville on ABC and "Arrow" on the CW have in common, is appealing characters in well-plotted stories.- Denver Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
What "Nashville" on ABC and Arrow on the CW have in common, is appealing characters in well-plotted stories.- Denver Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Better than a haunted house story, 666 Park has the potential to seduce audiences with a mix of grandeur, drama and horror and an underlying message on what's truly valuable in life.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Vegas is likely to be successful simply because, at heart, it's a CBS crime procedural with cowboy threads.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 25, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Conflicts and tortured characters abound. Unfortunately, the drama goes somewhat soggy when the camera leaves the tight confines of the submarine and the complex plotlines twist into knots.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Purists will miss the trappings of 221B Baker Street. But Elementary is appealing on several counts. Count No. 1 is Miller.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The casting and direction are solid. We'll stick with it for now to see if there's growth in the character relationships, too.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
If you like dark action-adventure with a deep mythology, you may enjoy this suspenseful hour, intended to perplex as it entertains. For some viewers, however, the questions will get in the way.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 14, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
A little bit screechy, a little bit preachy, NBC's The New Normal is nonetheless the best comedy of the season--a season short on innovative comedies.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 11, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Some are going to embrace this new freedom; others are going to be overwhelmed. The very personal reactions make for grand voyeurism.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Set in 1870s London, the tightly focused story of manipulative men, trapped women, an inappropriate, even abusive doctor, plus diary entries containing dreams of escape adds up to an inviting, rather highbrow wallow.- Denver Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The Scotts have held onto enough of the memorable 1978 movie adaptation of Robin Cook's novel to pay tribute, but added enough to make it feel contemporary.- Denver Post
- Posted Aug 31, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The second hour is more engrossing than the first, and is easily rich enough to keep us coming back for more.- Denver Post
- Posted Aug 21, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Frankly, the acting merits more accolades than the storylines so far.- Denver Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
HBO tackles some familiar territory--beauty and the perils of aging, crowsfeet to sagging cheeks--but treats the subject from several new angles thanks to the candor of the older, wiser, still stunning former models.- Denver Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Byrne is trapped in a mediocre effort he created with Rob Long of "Cheers" that's best forgotten.- Denver Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Think the Clintons meet "Dallas" in D.C. And that, for six episodes, may be enough.- Denver Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Producer Terence Wrong once again delivers fast-paced, narration-free, riveting footage, thanks to video crews who spent four months, unescorted and unhindered, with hospital personnel and patients at crisis points in their lives.- Denver Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The second season looks to be equally incisive [as the first]. With heart.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Anger Management is a perfectly acceptable, standard-issue sitcom.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The extremes of smart and wacky writing styles have never been so much at odds.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Bunheads hasn't quite found its footing, but shows great promise thanks more to the cast and crew than to the initial hour.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 11, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Beneath the craziness and violence are some great character studies, meditations on the nature of humanity, clever social commentary, fun flashbacks to vampire lives in past centuries and, as always, cable-ready hard bodies.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The first film is well constructed to be unnerving; the second offers the sight of "Grey's" Dr. Yang toting a revolver. Both make for creepy-rich summer viewing.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Push Girls is a hybrid nonfiction series and, ultimately, an inspiring work.- Denver Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Denver Post
- Posted May 14, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
This season's three installments--"Scandal in Bohemia" is followed by a scary "The Hounds of Baskerville" and "The Reichenbach Fall" in which nemesis Moriarty (Andrew Scott) returns--make a pleasingly diverse set.- Denver Post
- Posted May 3, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
With Louis-Dreyfus inhabiting the central role, the writing shines.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Dunham succeeds in making viewers uncomfortable while proferring a new (sharp, slightly bitter) flavor of introspective female comedy.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Creator-executive producer Mitch Glazer draws a loving and critical portrait of the awesome and awful fantasyland that actually existed in that time and place.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Insulting, derivative and neither credible nor fanciful.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 3, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
While the characters are slight and the dialog is silly, there's a story there somewhere.- Denver Post
- Posted Apr 3, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
This isn't a procedural with a neat answer at the end of each episode. But it is involving.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Suffice it to say creator Matthew Weiner unspools enough story to keep fans hooked, immediately satisfying some curiosities and creating others.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Yes, they [Amanda Peet and David Walton] throw sparks, but it's more than that. The quick reparte and the presence of great secondary players is also a crucial part of the appeal.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 20, 2012
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- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
While Moore's performance is riveting, the most insightful aspects of the tale are the insider reactions.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Truthfully, a little bit of this fun farce may go a long way.- Denver Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
It is exploring new turf in terms of a relationship drama with a bold narrative premise, and vaguely spiritual aspirations.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
That uncomfortable flash of shame even as we smile at his antics is what makes Life's Too Short so oddly engaging.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 16, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
Depending on your tolerance, it's either a ridiculous presentation best suited to a drinking game (take a gulp every time the screen goes black), or a paranormal adventure that owes everything to "Lost."- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
The cast, from Katharine McPhee and Megan Hilty to Debra Messing and Angelica Huston, is superb. The subject matter is a carefully blended mix of artistic and accessible.- Denver Post
- Posted Feb 6, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
We'll see if audiences can tolerate the notion of profound interrelatedness as weekly entertainment.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 24, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
A spoofy, sarcastic and hilarious exercise in adult animation.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 18, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
A gross-out cartoon. Fans of "Archer" likely won't sit still for the more juvenile antics of Unsupervised.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 18, 2012
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Joanne Ostrow
It's all very creepy, mysterious and loaded with questions.- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Denver Post
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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