Metascore
72

Generally favorable reviews - based on 20 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 20
  2. Negative: 0 out of 20
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Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Aaron Barnhart
    Jul 8, 2020
    100
    There is much more to chew on than simply a story about refugees in Australia. Stateless is that rare show that demands a fairly sizable investment of your time; once you let it in your head, you may have a hard time getting it out.
  2. Reviewed by: Kristen Baldwin
    Jul 2, 2020
    91
    Strahovski, who’s spent the past three years hemmed into Serena Joy’s circular character arc on The Handmaid’s Tale, gives a beautifully nuanced performance as Sofie.
  3. Reviewed by: Judy Berman
    Jul 6, 2020
    90
    Stateless starts slow, and its earnestness may be off-putting to some. But it has something profound to say about how injustice can snowball into catastrophe.
  4. Reviewed by: Matthew Gilbert
    Jul 2, 2020
    90
    A masterfully told, forcefully acted nightmare about life in a dirty, bureaucratically impacted limbo — this one fictional and in Australia, called Barton Detention Center.
  5. Reviewed by: Ed Cumming
    Jul 8, 2020
    80
    This is an intriguing, sympathetic and humane drama that also serves as a critical examination of the Australian immigration system.
  6. Reviewed by: Catherine Gee
    Jul 8, 2020
    80
    For Australian viewers (Stateless aired on Australia’s ABC earlier this year), the series serves as a both an enthralling thriller and an important chance to reflect on what has happened in their own country. For us in the UK, it’s both those things, as well as an educational portrayal of a side that we rarely see in a country with which we feel so familiar.
  7. Reviewed by: Daniel D'Addario
    Jul 2, 2020
    80
    West and Blanchett are at society’s fringes, while anti-immigrant sentiment — as series-ending onscreen titles about the ongoing crisis of Australia’s detention centers, now placed offshore — is at the center of societies the world over. It’s a point “Stateless” makes crisply, one that gains in power from the hairpin-reversing manner through which the series arrives there, and one that makes it urgent viewing.
  8. Reviewed by: Luke Buckmaster
    Jul 2, 2020
    80
    Strahovski gets the meatiest arc as Sofie, her journey tied not just to political and bureaucratic situations but a mental illness, the development of which is stretched out over the show’s lengthy running time. This patient, big-thinking approach is reflected in other tangents – such as Ameer’s dramatic backstory, the precise details of it remaining a mystery until more or less the end.
  9. Reviewed by: Brian Tallerico
    Oct 5, 2020
    75
    “Stateless” sometimes has a habit of spelling out its themes in dialogue (“All you want to do is leave and all we want to do is stay”), but it avoids melodrama, for the most part, allowing actions to feel genuine and characters to find depth.
  10. Reviewed by: Glenn Garvin
    Jul 29, 2020
    75
    Stateless is a good reminder that neither the politics nor the human tragedy of immigration has gone away, and that in the United States, the conflation of immigration with hatred for or love of Trump has almost completely obscured the real issue, the immigrants themselves.
  11. Reviewed by: Mike Hale
    Jul 7, 2020
    70
    While the series, available in the United States on Netflix beginning Wednesday, is well made, well acted and well intentioned, it’s probably less interesting as a social-problem drama than as an example of what even the Cate Blanchetts of the world have to do to get a social-problem drama made.
  12. Reviewed by: Deborah Young
    Feb 27, 2020
    70
    The two hours screened for audiences in the Berlinale Series sidebar appeared to be an edited sampler of several episodes with a bit of narrative missing and some resultant confusion. But the two main intertwining stories — an Afghan family fleeing the Taliban and a German flight attendant on the run from her personal demons — make an impression as they highlight the contrast between first- and third-world citizens who decide to change countries. ... Strahovski (The Handmaid's Tale) creates an engrossing pop-up character for whom one willingly suspends disbelief.
  13. Reviewed by: Ben Travers
    Jul 8, 2020
    67
    As a true story that touches on a worldwide crisis, “Stateless” does its job. As a current interrogation of that crises, it comes up a bit short.
  14. Reviewed by: Nick Allen
    Jul 8, 2020
    63
    There isn’t much of a debate to be had about the counter-productivity of the refugee system, or the gross use of force in maintaining it, and yet “Stateless” wants its characters to have these open debates for the sake of full-force drama. It's this type of “all lives matter” storytelling that constantly keeps “Stateless” out of touch with the humanity that’s truly at stake.