• Network: Apple TV
  • Series Premiere Date: Apr 5, 2024
Season #: 2, 1
Metascore
67

Generally favorable reviews - based on 25 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 15 out of 25
  2. Negative: 2 out of 25

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Laura Miller
    Apr 5, 2024
    90
    Splendid, stylish. .... Farrell’s performance has a restrained, melancholy tenderness that suffuses the series. .... Sugar’s sweetness is a kind of superpower, a wild card in a world where almost everyone else can be expected to behave badly. That’s not the most unusual thing about him, but it’s the thing that makes him so much worth watching.
  2. Reviewed by: Kaiya Shunyata
    Mar 29, 2024
    90
    “Sugar” feels like a show that is destined for success. Farrell’s performance is one of the best of the year, and hopefully he’s able to inhabit this character for many more seasons. The way the series and its titular character both struggle with ideas of violence, shame and complicity is enthralling from start to finish, and proves that while “Sugar” isn’t necessarily reinventing the genre, it's bending it to its will.
  3. Reviewed by: Ross McIndoe
    Apr 1, 2024
    88
    Sugar humanizes its villains without ever losing sight of their villainy and gives us a hero who fully deserves his place alongside the likes of Philip Marlowe and Sam Spade.
  4. Reviewed by: Matthew Jackson
    Apr 1, 2024
    85
    Sleek, witty, and satisfyingly twisty, it's an engrossing new mystery for lovers of the genre and a wonderful showcase for star Colin Farrell.
  5. Reviewed by: Dave Nemetz
    Mar 27, 2024
    83
    Apple TV+’s Sugar is a stylish throwback to classic film noir, with a compelling turn from star Colin Farrell.
  6. Reviewed by: Kyle Mullin
    Apr 9, 2024
    80
    The second episode also has a number of evocatively shot scenes. But the character development on this episode (which runs ten minutes shorter than the premiere) is equally effective. This is especially true of Ryan’s Melanie.
  7. Reviewed by: Joel Keller
    Apr 5, 2024
    80
    Despite the languid pacing, Sugar had us engaged for the entire first episode, mainly because Colin Farrell embodies the character of John Sugar so well.
  8. Reviewed by: Mike Hale
    Apr 5, 2024
    80
    The hints of spy or conspiracy thriller that waft around the edges of the detective story become more insistent until they break into the open fairly late in the season, in a reveal that is most likely to sharply divide opinions. .... Yet to its credit, it also remains an L.A. noir, in mood and morals, to the end. You have to admire it, if only for Protosevich’s chutzpah in trying to pull it off.
  9. Reviewed by: John Anderson
    Apr 4, 2024
    80
    Mr. Farrell and Ms. Ryan, first-rate actors, may not be Nick and Nora, but they make a memorable pair of fractured detectives. .... The troubling character is Ruby, though a viewer will have to stick with eight episodes to find out why. It will be easy. It's the stuff bad dreams are made of.
  10. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Apr 4, 2024
    80
    Amid a deluge of streaming content, sometimes it’s a pleasure simply to come across something that manages to make the familiar seem original. “Sugar” isn’t flawless, but the sweetness of that sensation, to borrow from a certain old movie, feels like the stuff dreams are made of.
  11. Reviewed by: Nate Richard
    Apr 2, 2024
    80
    Despite the story becoming a tad muddled in its final installments, its bold plot twist is creatively admirable. Sugar is both a tribute to the classic film noir that is almost all but extinct in modern Hollywood and your next TV obsession — as long as you prepare for the rug to be pulled out from right under your feet.
  12. Reviewed by: Chris Bennion
    Mar 27, 2024
    80
    The beats are familiar – deliberately so – but the performances are strong, particularly Nate Corddry as Olivia’s stepbrother, a former child star trying to make his comeback as a talentless, chinless adult. No one outdoes Farrell, however.
  13. Reviewed by: Michael Phillips
    Apr 5, 2024
    75
    I found a lot of it absorbing, and nearly every performance first-rate. Did I buy it? Uh, most of it? None of it? Enough of it? Something like that, yes. If enough viewers go for the twist, well, the open-ended ending of “Sugar” sets up a second season with ease.
  14. Reviewed by: Todd Lazarski
    Apr 2, 2024
    75
    The show bobs, weaves, and eventually turns, establishing itself as something quite like one of Farrell’s finest performances, In Bruges, and also as something, as contrived as the notion may seem, like Los Angeles itself. Nothing is quite what it seems.
  15. Reviewed by: Rodrigo Perez
    Mar 27, 2024
    67
    Despite falling apart in its last few episodes— the suspension of disbelief shattered, and the series even feeling like a bit of a betrayal— there’s still much to love and recommend before “Sugar” goes off the rails.