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CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
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Positive:
5
Mixed:
4
Negative:
0
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Critic Reviews
Season 2 Review:
As with previous installments, the victims’ stories are presented with relatively little sensationalism, and Remini remains a brassy but open-hearted presence. Season two promises to expose more sexual and physical abuse within Scientology’s ranks, and the premiere proved an auspiciously sensitive start.
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Season 1 Review:
What Scientology and the Aftermath lacks in cinematic polish and the caliber of familiar celebrities featured in “Going Clear”--director Paul Haggis, one of the most famous Hollywood adherents to publicly defect from the Church prior to Remini, led off Gibney’s documentary--is somewhat supplanted by Remini’s honest anger and frustration, both of which blaze across the screen in reaction to particularly damning revelations. Remini’s overall likability is this program’s most valuable asset.
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Season 1 Review:
It isn’t hugely dynamic as a viewing experience, with a heavy reliance on talking-head interviews, archival footage of Scientology events, schlocky B-roll footage, and basso profundo sound effects to indicate tension. But Remini’s presence is compelling (and frequently wacky), while her outrage at the institution she grew up in seems deeply felt.
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Season 1 Review:
Engrossing, but probably not as captivating as what's taking place to get the show to air. .... Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath will stir up some viewer emotions, but it's not a dynamic series, even with the added footage of Remini and Rinder in transit between interviews. It's a lot of sitting around talking, interspersed with footage from fairly innocuous Scientology promotional videos and event interviews.
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Season 1 Review:
Toward the end of the premiere, Remini is shown saying she’s hearing the same stories “over and over”--that the abuse and harassment former members are subjected to have similar traits. Unfortunately, that’s not much of an incentive to keep watching her series, which even during the first hour becomes a little repetitive. Nevertheless, Remini comes across as a sincere crusader.
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Season 3 Review:
The production value is appreciable, but the unscripted moments are the most engaging. The third season of Leah Remini: Scientology and Aftermath promises to be ambitious and sprawling. If the show highlighted its less predictable moments instead of recycling well-rehearsed, information-dense interviews, it might begin to more effectively and earnestly answer its big questions.
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