Critic Reviews
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It’s not a groundbreaking role for Nesbitt but it does remind you that few do the tormented Everyman better than he does. And, just as deeply pleasingly, it has the always-magnificent Tracy-Ann Oberman. .... The plot moves in increasingly convoluted but well-oiled grooves towards its resolution over the course of eight episodes.
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It's kind of bonkers and likely to engage viewers, but one can't help but be left wanting a little more.
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here are lazy shortcuts to characterisation, with several players reduced to little more than narrative cogs. But as disposable entertainment goes, Run Away is effective hokum. And sometimes, particularly on New Year’s Day, that’s precisely what the patient requires.
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For those still nursing holiday hangovers, the hull may hold through the eight episodes of this admittedly never-boring thriller. Others may find themselves hoping that next year’s Coben anchors itself just a bit more slightly to things like logic and reality.
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The show shortchanges its audience on the one quality essential to every great mystery. Logic. .... The subplots are seductive enough, particularly the “Natural Born Killers”-inspired spree being conducted by the mysterious Dee and Ash (Maeve Courtier-Lilley and Jon Pointing), which takes place away from the rails of the Paige-Simon journey, at least for a while.
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For all its twists, turns, red herrings and fishy dialogue, Run Away (Netflix) gives the viewer exactly what it expects. We came here to binge, not watch. It’s the TV drama equivalent of mindlessly scrolling your phone.
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