Metascore
58

Mixed or average reviews - based on 8 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 2 out of 8
  2. Negative: 0 out of 8
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Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: James Hibbs
    Dec 15, 2022
    60
    It's where the show leans into the emotional core of those affected by this awful crime that episodes 2 and 4, the lesser chapters, shine brightest, rather than in their more traditional police procedural or court room trappings. ... Unfortunately this does make episode 4, which dramatises Marina Litvinenko's years-long legal battle for justice, the weakest of the bunch.
  2. Reviewed by: Nick Hilton
    Dec 15, 2022
    60
    Litvinenko is sensitive and tactful, almost to a fault. But in a world where complex questions about Anglo-Russian relations dominate discussions in the corridors of power, it has little to add other than slack-jawed amazement.
  3. Reviewed by: Anita Singh
    Dec 15, 2022
    60
    They’re decent, salt-of-the-earth coppers who vow to ensure justice is done, and it’s instructive to see how the investigation was conducted, but they’re marooned in a drama involving dull court testimony and endless scenes of people in hazmat suits.
  4. Reviewed by: Chase Hutchinson
    Dec 15, 2022
    58
    Unfortunately, in execution, Litvinenko is a middling miniseries that is sporadically interesting though ultimately never comes together, even as it grasps at something more. For all its committed performances, it is a work whose dramatic elements are too haphazardly and hurriedly sketched to leave an impact.
  5. Reviewed by: Daniel Fienberg
    Dec 15, 2022
    40
    Well, it’s presently dryly and chronologically and truthfully, which happens to be the least compelling way to tell this story. The second episode, smarting a little from Tennant’s abrupt arrival and then absence, loses all momentum.
  6. Reviewed by: Lucy Mangan
    Dec 15, 2022
    40
    This shouldn’t have been a rush job. There has been the opportunity to work on the story of his life and his death and transmute it – especially in a time when dictatorial regimes, violence and governmental lawlessness are in the ascendant – into something better, broader, more meaningful than this.