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CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
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Positive:
20
Mixed:
5
Negative:
0
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Critic Reviews
Season 1 Review:
The message of the show never takes over the entertainment value. It’s just a consistent hum throughout. Be yourself. Love who you are. Stand up for what you believe in. Although groundbreaking in and of itself in many way, Victor’s story is most special because of how normally the show treats it and its charismatic and adorable title character. There’s just so much here to love.
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Season 1 Review:
It’s sweet, funny, goofy, full of emotion, a little rocky in parts, sometimes a little overloaded on heavy backstory, and not particularly interested in subtlety. But for a first season especially, it’s impressive how effectively it turns Love, Simon’s epistolary structure against itself.
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Season 1 Review:
The nuances of questioning one's identity, experiencing a romantic and sexual spectrum, are flattened by catering to the same audience that drew Love, Simon to theaters in droves — queer folks, of course, but also straight audiences who aren't necessarily looking to engage in the myriad of identities and communities lumped together under one neatly packaged rainbow flag.
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Season 1 Review:
It never gives up on its original mission statement that happy endings aren't as easily attained and painless for most of us as they might appear to be in various legends. Neither does it deflate the notion that everybody deserves them, a token of optimism worth holding close to the heart and maybe even binging upon, depending on your mood. Nice is fine, and we could use more of it. In that regard, "Love, Victor" meets those expectations.
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Season 1 Review:
The show succeeds just fine on its own—it’s charming and clever and gives a few reasons to swoon (I suspect Anthony Turpel as Victor’s bestie will win plenty of hearts of his own). It could have represented something bigger, though, rather than standing as yet another example of Disney copping out.
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Season 1 Review:
As a high school comedy, it is very much on the light side. ... Apart from the main theme, which itself has come up on television before, none of the plotlines feel especially original; but that also never feels particularly like a problem, as the characters are likable, the series is good-hearted and, although the dialogue sounds forced at times, the more serious exchanges feel emotionally true.
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Season 1 Review:
Spun out of the novel turned 2018 film "Love, Simon," "Love, Victor" offers a breezy yet touching extension of that story, with a new teen -- having transferred to the same high school -- experiencing his own coming-out story. Diverted to Hulu from Disney+, it's a well-crafted teen soap, with a few clever wrinkles and a winning cast.
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Season 1 Review:
The episodic sitcom rhythms allow for an easier access point to the narrative about identity and prejudice—both internal and external. But it seems frustratingly hesitant to assert itself as a mainstream teen dramedy with an openly gay protagonist, returning to the starting line of Love, Simon rather than building forward from it.
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The GuardianJun 16, 2020
Season 1 Review:
There are much better TV seasons involving gay teens figuring out when, how, and why to speak their truth to the people they love — the first years of My So-Called Life, One Day at a Time, and Everything Sucks, to name just three, are all available to binge this weekend — but this one’s heart is largely in the right place, and sometimes, sincerity’s enough.
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TV Guide MagazineJun 19, 2020
Season 1 Review:
Even when you empathize with Victor's growing pains, you may wish it didn't feel so much like a life lesson. [22 Jun - 5 Jul 2020, p.76]
Season 1 Review:
Yes, Love, Victor is aimed at a younger audience. But the surface-level struggles that Victor undergoes — which, like Simon's, seem more about fitting in and giving up the relative privilege of passing as straight — mean the series misses out on a more resonant story about the specificities of the character's fears of coming out, as they pertain to his faith, his relationship to his parents or his self-image (particularly as a popular, clean-cut athlete). Newcomer Cimino isn't able to provide the depth lacking in the scripts.
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