- Network: HBO
- Series Premiere Date: Feb 21, 2021
User Score
Mixed or average reviews- based on 32 Ratings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 12 out of 32
-
Mixed: 2 out of 32
-
Negative: 18 out of 32
Review this tv show
-
-
Please sign in or create an account before writing a review.
-
-
Submit
-
Check Spelling
User Reviews
- User score
- By date
- Most helpful
-
Feb 25, 2021The film is a large-scale smear campaign against Woody Allen. Please deal with the topic more intensively and do not believe the lies that the white Farrows spread. The non-white children are not heard in the documentary.
Take a look at this YouTube video or read Mosses Farrow's blog.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muyaCg2dGAk&t=6993s
http://mosesfarrow.blogspot.com/ -
Feb 21, 2021Three problems: 1) Overly sensational, with suggestive emotional appeals based in speculation, not evidence. 2) Little new information (so far, one episode in) that is directly incriminating. 3) Extremely one-sided, offering few counter-arguments or explanations from Allen. Let's hope the next three episodes are more nuanced and balanced...
-
Feb 23, 2021http://mosesfarrow.blogspot.com/2018/05/a-son-speaks-out-by-moses-farrow.html
-
Mar 16, 2021One sided to the point where you’re asking obvious questions the producers never bothered to ask. If you’re looking for clarity about the situation it’s not here.
-
Feb 22, 2021Yellow press, did expect more from HBO. Of course, Allen is heard only via audiobook from his memoir Apropos Of Nothing which is meant to stand in for his side of the story? Well, that' lazy. But again, what about Soon Yi? Why not interview her, or their adopted children? Or Moses Farrow?
Is it coming in the next episodes? Or what new info is there to beat the dead horse for the 4th time? -
Feb 23, 2021
-
Feb 28, 2021
Awards & Rankings
-
Hearing the allegations directly from Dylan, Mia and other family members made them all the more shocking. But without input from Allen or those with countering evidence, this felt one-sided. Perhaps it is best to see Allen v Farrow not as a piece of hard-hitting investigative journalism, but as a space for a woman to share her pain and be heard without mitigation.
-
What makes “Allen v. Farrow” appointment television — and justifies its running time (over four hour-long episodes each Sunday beginning Feb. 21) — is that it expands beyond the case and the people involved. ... The series is incredibly absorbing.
-
The problem with this series, compellingly presented though it was, with Farrow’s son Ronan giving damning evidence against his former quasi “stepfather” and a family friend saying she saw Allen applying sunscreen to Dylan’s buttocks in an inappropriate way, is that it was totally one-sided.