Metascore
73

Generally favorable reviews - based on 7 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 7
  2. Negative: 0 out of 7

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Scott Hines
    Jul 14, 2023
    90
    It’s easy to get hung up on the choice to recreate Chamberlain’s voice, but love that choice or hate it, Goliath is a first-rate piece of sports documentary filmmaking, one worthy of its titanic subject.
  2. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Jul 20, 2023
    85
    “Goliath” nevertheless manages to feel as big as its subject, shedding light on a figure who, misunderstood or not, seemed larger than life in every conceivable way.
  3. Reviewed by: Richard Roeper
    Jul 14, 2023
    75
    Not that “Goliath” is all hagiography. The series spends a considerable amount of time examining Chamberlain’s frustration at his teams continually being bested by Bill Russell’s Boston Celtics, which resulted in Wilt being labeled a perpetual “loser.” The filmmakers also address the dichotomy of Chamberlain having a famously lavish and hedonistic lifestyle, and supporting female athletes.
  4. Reviewed by: John Anderson
    Jul 14, 2023
    70
    The delivery by Robot Chamberlain seemed stiff. The recurring shadow-puppet motif—to which the directors resort when their story lacks corresponding film footage—exacerbates the sense of artifice. It may be a case of knowing too much. Regardless, the flesh-and-blood humans who appear throughout "Goliath" are refreshinglsy candid, informative and likable, even if the lineup is a bit dubious.
  5. Reviewed by: Mike Hale
    Jul 14, 2023
    70
    “Goliath,” directed by Rob Ford and Christopher Dillon, is a more workmanlike and conventional project than “Luckiest Guy.” But across three episodes it makes a persuasive case for Chamberlain as a generous, sensitive soul who was both blessed and constrained by his stature and his extraordinary all-around athletic ability.
  6. Reviewed by: Daniel Fienberg
    Jul 14, 2023
    70
    Goliath is satisfying enough as it goes, but maybe the legend of Wilt Chamberlain demanded that extra depth.
  7. Reviewed by: Corbin Smith
    Jul 17, 2023
    60
    Goliath is watchable and occasionally fascinating, in that sports-documentary sort of way. But there are some issues. Goliath’s directors and editors appear to have taken all of the archival footage that appears in the movie from YouTube. .... Also lazy and uncanny: the decision to use AI to bring some of Wilt’s written words to “life” with a tone-deaf simulacrum of a dead man’s voice to narrate the proceedings.