Metascore
59

Mixed or average reviews - based on 12 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 4 out of 12
  2. Negative: 1 out of 12

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Neil McCormick
    Jan 31, 2022
    60
    Janet’s talent and career are certainly deserving of close examination and celebration, but they prove almost impossible to disentangle from the fact that while she was one of the biggest stars of her pop era, her sibling was arguably the biggest and most controversial star in pop history.
  2. Reviewed by: Kyndall Cunningham
    Jan 28, 2022
    60
    While the portrait painted of Janet thus far feels deeply familiar and previously established, it’s nevertheless a rare treat for her most dedicated fans. Whether they discover anything new about the secretive superstar is another story.
  3. Reviewed by: Lovia Gyarkye
    Jan 28, 2022
    60
    The four-hour documentary special (of which critics received the first two episodes) is a work of uneven personal storytelling, an attempt by the legendary star to wrest control of her narrative from the grips of public discourse.
  4. Reviewed by: Jon Caramanica
    Jan 31, 2022
    50
    “Janet Jackson” is a sanctioned documentary with the feel of a YouTube news clip aggregation. Jackson is interviewed extensively, but largely provides play-by-play, rarely color commentary.
  5. Reviewed by: Mick LaSalle
    Jan 28, 2022
    50
    Throughout, Janet Jackson doesn’t tell you everything, but she tells you just enough that you can make inferences, even ones she doesn’t intend.
  6. Reviewed by: Daniel D'Addario
    Jan 27, 2022
    50
    For now, Jackson remains fascinating but enigmatic — a star about whom we’ll perpetually want to know more. And viewers will have known that before investing the time in a doc that can’t quite figure out its namesake.
  7. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Jan 28, 2022
    45
    Janet Jackson gave a documentary crew access for five years, but with Jackson and brother Randy Jackson serving as executive producers the resulting project, "Janet Jackson," feels too conspicuously like a licensed product. Addressing some uncomfortable parts of her biography but sidestepping others, it's pretty obvious who's in control here.