- Network: NBC
- Series Premiere Date: Oct 13, 2008
Watch Now
Where To Watch
Critic Reviews
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
The pilot gingerly lays out most of the elements My Own Worst Enemy will need to survive--leaving it to the show to either make its strange case or live down to its name.
-
My Own Worst Enemy looks like it’s been assembled from the leftovers of other pop-culture heavyweights.
-
Slater plays out spy-story clichés that were campy on "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." 40 years ago.
-
The show's success may depend on whether the public's fascination with Slater trumps its collective attention-deficit disorders.
-
The two halves don't add up to an engrossing whole. The show's worst enemy? The perplexing, cynical writing.
-
Bad, then decent, then confusing. That's not exactly the trajectory you're looking for in a pilot.
-
It's a subject that was explored more deeply, and even a touch more believably, in BBC America's "Jekyll," a nail-biter of an update in which James Nesbitt inhabited both personalities so completely they barely even looked alike. Slater, by contrast, just seems like a guy in need of a good night's sleep.
-
Reminiscent at times of "The Bourne Identity" or "Face/Off," to name a few movie influences it does not improve upon, the beyond-high-concept Enemy asks us to believe Christian Slater as a cold-blooded assassin named Edward who doubles, when a switch in his brain is flipped, as a milquetoast family man named Henry.
-
My Own Worst Enemy's worst enemy is all the murky mumbo-jumbo mechanics the writers have introduced to support their stupid split-personality thesis.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 49 out of 55
-
Mixed: 2 out of 55
-
Negative: 4 out of 55
-
Jan 11, 2015
-
Dec 14, 2010
-
TrudiFAug 6, 2009