CBS | Release Date: January 23, 2005
CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION
53
METASCORE
Mixed or average reviews based on 24 Critic Reviews
Positive:
6
Mixed:
16
Negative:
2
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75
New York PostLinda StasiJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: It's actually more interesting than you might have thought. [21 Jan 2005]
70
VarietyBrian LowryJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: The major stumbling block remains that it's odd to contemplate seeking algorithmic solutions to crimes or having a guy who got beat up a lot in high school answering 911 calls. So even with Charlie functioning as a kind of adjunct to the bureau, it's muddled how they'll consistently capitalize on his abilities. [17 Jan 2005]
63
Chicago Sun-TimesPhil RosenthalJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: "Numb3rs" isn't awful, but it's also not as smart, inventive or layered as its characters need to be and often seem. [21 Jan 2005]
60
NewsdayNoel HolstonJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: Watching Charlie stare into space and compute somehow isn't as persuasive as watching Gil Grissom or one of his "CSI" cohorts peer into a microscope. [23 Jan 2005]
60
Orlando SentinelHal BoedekerJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: What a cast. What a waste. ... Numb3rs doesn't have the humor of CSI, the passion of Without a Trace or the nervy style of Cold Case. [23 Jan 2005]
58
Houston ChronicleMike McDanielJun 18, 2013
Season 1 Review: In trying to service all the characters, the drama is not as compelling as it should be. [2 Jan 2005]
50
Boston HeraldSarah RodmanJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: The glimmers of truthfulness in the family nucleus offset the chilly crime elements. ... The office environment is less compelling as the coterie of feds... perform their unpleasant tasks with little personality. [23 Jan 2005]
50
Chicago TribuneSid SmithJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: At times, Morrow seems not in the same family with Krumholtz and Hirsch, and at others not even in the same TV series. He's in a world of his own. [21 Jan 2005]
50
Dallas Morning NewsEd BarkJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: Mr. Morrow plays the lead character with no discernible flair or charisma, making even by-the-book Joe Friday seem like Willy Wonka or something. [23 Jan 2005]
50
Detroit Free PressMike DuffyJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: A sometimes clever twist on the overly familiar crime drama format ... is ultimately bogged down in the same old gory homicidal cliches and whodunit solutions. [23 Jan 2005]
50
Newark Star-LedgerAlan SepinwallJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: If you've somehow never seen any of the twelve dozen procedural crime shows that CBS does, it might feel a little new, but too often the scenes with Don and his colleagues feel obligatory, like everyone is doing their best to keep the plot moving until Charlie bursts in with the correct digits. [21 Jan 2005]
50
Pittsburgh Post-GazetteRob OwenJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: It's not a bad show, merely ho-hum. Perhaps it will have greater appeal to people who liked math in school, but to me "NUMB3RS" just seems like a "CSI" clone with the quadratic formula tossed in for good effect. [23 Jan 2005]
50
Season 1 Review: The premise of "Numb3rs" is as gimmicky as its typographically tricky title. [23 Jan 2005]
50
San Jose Mercury News/Contra Costa TimesChuck BarneyJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: This is by no means a lousy show. The performances are solid and the brothers-working-together dynamic is intriguing. But the pilot lacked dramatic oomph, and it did a poor job of actually taking viewers inside the math and explaining how it works. Consequently, "Numb3rs" just doesn't add up. [22 Jan 2005]
40
Kansas City StarJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: Like other CBS crime dramas, this one is grim, dark and laden with production gimmicks. ... You would never know it came from two established filmmakers, Tony and Ridley Scott. [21 Jan 2005]
40
New York Daily NewsDavid BianculliJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: Despite a way-above-average cast, the new CBS drama series "Numb3rs"... doesn't quite add up. [20 Jan 2005]
30
Washington PostTom ShalesJul 8, 2013
Season 1 Review: No matter how often we're told how unbearably fascinating it all is, it isn't. It's more likely to trigger horrifying flashbacks to algebra class. [22 Jan 2005]