CBS | Release Date: March 30, 1990
CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION
33
METASCORE
Generally unfavorable reviews based on 9 Critic Reviews
Positive:
1
Mixed:
3
Negative:
5
70
Chicago TribuneRick KoganMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: Goldberg is so sure-footed and likable in her part that she may at last have found a comfortable home for her talents, after some disastrous big-screen interludes. Stapleton, handsome and pert as ever, displays the gifts of timing and tact that brought her three Emmys. [30 Mar 1990, p.5C]
40
Miami HeraldHal BoedekerMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: Based on the vivid 1988 movie, the sitcom is a disappointment. [30 Mar 1990, p.E1]
40
Seattle Post-IntelligencerStaffMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: The premiere episode attacks with a loud, hard-edged style that slams home every line and never gives you time to care. [30 Mar 1990, p.30]
25
Boston GlobeEd SiegelMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: Imagine a series that drains every bit of abnormality out of the wonderful spaciness of the feature film about life at a desert cafe. What makes this series unwatchable is that they also drained the humor out. Whoopi Goldberg and Jean Stapleton must be hard up for work these days. Stapleton adds a touch of class and Goldberg adds a good line or two, but this series isn't nearly good enough to be considered the road-company version of Bagdad Cafe. [28 Mar 1990, p.65]
20
Season 1 Review: Where the film began on a distinctly glum note, then built toward a spirit of renewal, the pilot episode of the sitcom starts out noisy and stays that way. In other words, a bewitching and intriguing movie has been trashed once again in the making of a har-de-har sitcom. [30 Mar 1990, p.E-17]
20
USA TodayMatt RoushMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: Bagdad Cafe fails because it's an eccentric idea given a mainstream treatment. [29 Mar 1990, p.3D]
20
NewsdayAndy EdelsteinMay 4, 2014
Season 1 Review: The pairing might have worked, if only they weren't saddled with trite dialogue. ("Am I disturbing you?" someone says to cafe owner Whoopi: "Too late, I'm already disturbed.") And it might have worked if the show had more resembled a "small" production of the kind that some pay-cable services specialize in instead of an assembly-line, go-for-the-cheap-shot sitcom. [30 Mar 1990, p.II-5]