Watch Now
Where To Watch
Critic Reviews
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Overall, the season gets off to a very strong--and interesting--start. The writing is deepening along with the relationships depicted.
-
Girls was great last year. But this season it just got a little bit better.
-
May 7, 2012Four episodes in, and Girls is still packing tons of jaw-dropping, head-shaking, eyebrow-raising scenes into 30 minutes each Sunday night.
-
It's a raw, ironic, occasionally touching comedy of post-millennial manners. [23 Apr 2012, p.37]
-
Girls grew on me. As annoying as the characters can be, they also evince recognizable traits in absurdly realistic situations.
-
With its precisely drawn characters, winning performances, and frank, well-observed humor, Girls is a knockout.
-
Dunham manages to ties the grimaces and grins together with a comedic sensibility that allows you to see these characters as they are with all their irritating and contradictory behavior, but still root for them as they feel their way into adulthood.
-
Many young women, if they're being honest, will see themselves here. And many parents will see their daughters.
-
Its distinctive voice makes it feel fresh and original, and the poignant comedy gets better with every episode.
-
It's so intensely focused on these specific girls and their "Sex and the City" dream, though, that at times it may not resonate as much with a larger audience.
-
If you are female and under the age of 28, you may really relate to these women and their struggles. If you're over that age, you should hang in until episode three when the series takes off in a great way.
-
Lena Dunham's brilliantly raw and raunchy Girls [is] a true breakthrough series.
-
As television, Girls is disturbing, sharply honed and even wickedly funny.
-
Though Lena Dunham's characters are far more sympathetic, she takes pains to debase them, and makes them both funnier and more recognizably human in the process.
-
Dunham's simply writing what she knows, and incredibly well.
-
There is a cool cleverness to the show that is both attractive and off-putting; the characters are flawed and hyper-aware of their flaws, the stories so bent on covering every angle of self-examination that there is no real role for the viewer to play.
-
From the moment I saw the pilot of Girls, I was a goner, a convert.
-
[Dunham has] crafted an honest and at least occasionally hilarious show that might even live up to its hype.
-
These gals are at times so self-absorbed it's difficult to feel much for them when things don't go their way.
-
Girls is smart, bracing, funny, accurately absurd, confessional yet self-aware, but it is also undeniably about four white chicks with, relatively speaking, no worries in the world.
-
Lena Dunham's much anticipated comedy about four single women in New York is worth all the fuss, even though it invites comparisons to Carrie Bradshaw and friends, and even though it incites a lot of dreary debate about the demise of feminism.
-
It's raw, audacious, nuanced and richly, often excruciatingly funny.
-
It's a distinctive, signature series from a decidedly singular voice.
-
Dunham succeeds in making viewers uncomfortable while proferring a new (sharp, slightly bitter) flavor of introspective female comedy.
-
Girls represents an exciting moment in television history because, like a handful of other shows (MTV's "Awkward," most notably) it not only makes great use of the medium but has the creative guts to realign it for a new century and a new generation.
-
It definitely has a voice, and it's a great one: witty and wise and warm and not exactly like anything you've heard before.
-
It's certainly been a long time since I was this beguiled by a set a characters, but Girls is one of those rare birds: It's a show that comes to us with its voice, characters and ideas fully formed.
-
Extremely funny and extremely raunchy (consider yourself warned), but Dunham's a major talent.
-
If "Tiny Furniture" filmmaker Lena Dunham's series is in places too mannered, it's also fresh, honest and raw.
-
It possesses a different rhythm from any other show on TV. [13 Apr 2012, p.73]
-
The new HBO series from Lena Dunham (Tiny Furniture) is one of the most original, spot-on, no-missed-steps series in recent memory.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 254 out of 382
-
Mixed: 36 out of 382
-
Negative: 92 out of 382
-
Apr 23, 2012
-
Apr 19, 2012
-
Apr 23, 2012