• Network: HBO
  • Series Premiere Date: Aug 12, 2019
Metascore
83

Universal acclaim - based on 10 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 9 out of 10
  2. Negative: 0 out of 10
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Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Aug 12, 2019
    80
    The language and pacing in Our Boys reflect its Israeli roots, but the emotional core of this powerful fact-based miniseries hinges on tribalism, the intractability of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the adage that an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind. In that, this HBO presentation offers a sobering window into that part of the world, with implications that swell far beyond it.
  2. Reviewed by: Ben Travers
    Aug 19, 2019
    83
    There’s an immense level of compassion here, which should ultimately prove rewarding for anyone who digs in.
  3. Reviewed by: Aaron Barnhart
    Sep 4, 2019
    100
    Despite the pacing, or maybe because of it, Our Boys is actually pretty engrossing. And it’s timely. ... By slowing the pace of its narrative, Our Boys buys itself enough time to see these nuances in its main characters, a luxury you don’t get on a typical episode of SVU. ... More than a crime show, this is a parable about the endlessly repeatable cycle of outrage and violence that has humans around the world in its grip right now.
  4. Reviewed by: Nick Allen
    Aug 12, 2019
    50
    The series' intrigue appears to be held together by Shlomi Elkabetz, whose performance as the investigator at the center is calming but weighed down. ... You can too easily imagine "Our Boys" leaving a deeper impression by being half the episode length, or cut into a two-hour movie.
  5. Reviewed by: Robyn Bahr
    Aug 9, 2019
    70
    Stylistically, it's simultaneously beautifully crafted and painfully sluggish — essentially your finest tapestry of abject misery porn. ... If the viewer does not have a passing knowledge of the innumerable conflicts between secular Israelis and ultra-Orthodox Jews, the socioeconomic stratification of Ashkenazi, Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews, or the in-fighting between extremist factions within Haredi Judaism, then they might be more than a little lost watching this program.
  6. Reviewed by: Emily Nussbaum
    Sep 16, 2019
    90
    A challenging work of art about the intractable problem of identity—the struggle of any individual to maintain core values, when the world demands nothing but solidarity based on shared victimhood. The show is unusually fearless about letting moral discomfort linger, and manages to be stirring without ever offering false hope, a rarity for even the best-made dramas.
  7. Reviewed by: Judy Berman
    Aug 13, 2019
    65
    It’s so conscientious that it’s bound to confuse viewers who aren’t familiar with Jerusalem neighborhoods, the Israeli justice system, or the differences between Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews. (As a secular American Jew, I often lost track.) Despite superb performances, this dearth of context and a frustratingly slow pace can make the show a hard sit. Stick around, though, and you’ll be rewarded with a timely argument that an eye for an eye isn’t always justice.
  8. TV Guide Magazine
    Reviewed by: Matt Roush
    Aug 1, 2019
    90
    With the authenticity and intensity recalling The Wire if set in the Middle East, Our Boys puts a human face on an age-old conflict, asking if justice is ever possible in a world where young boys are used as tragic pawns. [5 - 18 Aug 2019, p.11]
  9. Reviewed by: Daniel D'Addario
    Aug 13, 2019
    80
    [Mohammed’s family's] well-drawn grief and their confusion is the key reason to watch “Our Boys’s” early going. ... “Our Boys” is paced with a punishing slowness, as if to drag the viewer into the morass of distrust that is contemporary Israel. But it rewards with tough insight, as through Arbid’s and Blal’s performances or in moments when the young people of Israel speak with a horrible clarity, revealing what they’ve learned from their upbringings.
  10. Reviewed by: Dorothy Rabinowitz
    Aug 8, 2019
    100
    It’s clear from the outset of this dazzling chronicle set in Israel that there’s not going to be any softening of its extraordinary tension, its scenes of anguished suffering, its furiously eloquent debates on justice and loyalty, its epic crowd scenes. ... A work of distinguished writing, fearless in its sophistication, unfailing in its powers.
User Score
7.5

Generally favorable reviews- based on 25 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 19 out of 25
  2. Negative: 4 out of 25
  1. Aug 12, 2019
    9
    I've only seen the first couple of episodes so far, but it's riveting. It's a different feel than Fauda (Netflix), but the acting isI've only seen the first couple of episodes so far, but it's riveting. It's a different feel than Fauda (Netflix), but the acting is similarly superb. HBO has been on a roll lately, it feels. Full Review »
  2. Aug 14, 2019
    10
    incredibly emotional, intense and all around a great watch. Highly recommended!
  3. Nov 14, 2019
    7
    Good that I stuck with it after Ep1 . The series get really going in Ep 2., when it focuses on the Arab family. The acting is excellent, theGood that I stuck with it after Ep1 . The series get really going in Ep 2., when it focuses on the Arab family. The acting is excellent, the pacing engrossing, and the writing very "realistic". The only downer is still the camera work, as I described in Ep 1 see below. In the second half of the series, and the focus on the perps, the show also sags along with the idiocy of Avishai, the arrogance of his cousin and the coward uncle. I felt that it failed to connect with the viewer and trivialised the murder. Cinematographically weak there again.

    First take:
    Ep 1 didn't do it for me. Plot-wise, it is certainly interesting and refreshing (had to research Jewish religion and Jerusalem geography quite a bit) and reminded me of the film Babel where destinies of strangers collide, but the cinematographic quality is quite poor imho. The photography is very bland and jerky, sort of an episode of 24, that is so old-fashioned by today's TV standards. The Arab characters and their motivations felt also quite clichéd, or at least far less nuanced than the Jewish ones.
    Let's see if it gets better
    Full Review »