|
CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
|
Positive:
12
Mixed:
19
Negative:
0
|
Watch Now
Critic Reviews
RogerEbert.comJan 24, 2018
Season 1 Review:
Something of a missed opportunity. To entertain someone is a fine achievement, but to coax them down dark hallways, to lead them willingly into unpleasant corners, to make them wonder about the monsters lurking inside of others and themselves—that’s something else entirely. Not every show needs that kind of depth, but when you’re delving into the crevices of humanity, you’d better leave something for your audience to find.
Read full review
UPROXXJan 19, 2018
Season 1 Review:
The book had all kinds of novelty going for it in the mid-’90s. The TV show lacks that same capacity to surprise, so it (based on the two episodes TNT gave critics) has to lean much more on its story and characters, which were on the sketchy side to begin with. ... The actors are all good, Brühl in particular finding the balance between altruism and obsession, but don’t especially elevate the middling material. (The period setting also forgives the hodgepodge of accents.)
Read full review
Uncle BarkyJan 22, 2018
Season 1 Review:
Those who book full passage for Season One’s 10 episodes may or may not get full closure. The Alienist, which closes out Episode 2 with Moore at the mercy of gangland forces and their young boy prostitutes, so far is trying terribly hard to be darkly spellbinding. Toward that end, it has yet to make its case.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
There’s a real disconnect in this telling. With the exception of Sara and two junior detectives, fraternal twins ostracized on the force because they are Jewish, the story seems as dry as a box of Wheat Thins. The scenery is set. The people are dressed for their parts. But The Alienist rarely gets moving.
Read full review
IndieWireJan 22, 2018
Season 1 Review:
Be it Sherlock Holmes, “True Detective,” “From Hell,” “Ripper Street,” or even more recent series like “Mindhunter,” this kind of story has been told before and told better. Serial killers are always intriguing because they feel so alien, but “The Alienist” can’t will itself to be anything more than an R-rated update.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
Too much in the pilot gets short shrift at the expense of the show’s love affair with mood. Snow covers streets and then disappears in a scene set moments later; foreboding dialogue comes off as too on the nose. ... Episode two shakes off the unsavory visuals and moves the story and character relationships forward with less emphasis on the heaviness that hangs over the first hour, but by then, some viewers will have moved on.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
The early hours are mostly placid, even docile. What must have come to life in the pages of the book struggles to find so much as a spark on the screen — difficult, admittedly, through the pall of smoke and shadows that tend to choke it. The characters are bland, too.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
Grim and atmospheric to the point of dank, The Alienist proves so derivative as to blunt its appeal. Adapted from Caleb Carr's novel, this historical fiction is handsomely produced and smartly cast, but merely delivers the latest twist on a serial-killer yarn -- a particularly nasty one, true, but which at least initially fails to get under your skin.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
The pace is breathless, the music propulsive, the dialogue delivered almost pugnaciously--why is everyone leading with his or her chin? But there’s also sufficient breadth to give the show depth. That said. ... The dialogue is frequently dull, when not being very deliberately decorated with archaic slang. The acting is mixed--Mr. Bruhl is wonderfully intense, Ms. Fanning stiff and Mr. Evans still, perhaps, awaiting his moment.
Read full review
Season 1 Review:
As a moody and essentially faithful adaptation of Carr’s novel, the series gets off to a chilly yet satisfying start, an adequate entry to a particular genre that features dim lighting, resourceful urchins, a class-conscious tone and the sort of arftul staging of corpses that signifies brilliant derangement on the part of the killer. ... Peppered with cliches and predictable banter, The Alienist relies mostly on its atmospheric details to draw viewers in.
Read full review
Season 2 Review:
If Fanning's relative stiffness was excusable in "The Alienist" owing to the idea that Sara's confidence in her intellect was new and constantly being assaulted in this man's world, here she's calcified her emotions. Brühl's Kreizler feels even stiffer, to the point of making Ted Levine's still-crooked Thomas Byrnes, the former police chief, achieve Snidely Whiplash levels of hamminess. He's only one character among a bevy of side players who come off as cartoonishly two-dimensional which is good news for Evans, who comes off OK in the midst of this.
Read full review
TV Guide MagazineJan 22, 2018
Season 1 Review:
It's all quite sordid and grisly, but only Douglas Smith and Matthew Shear as Jewish twin-brother detectives and cutting-edge forensic nerds seem to be enjoying the hunt. [22 Jan - 4 Feb 2018, p.13]
Current TV Shows
By MetascoreBy User Score













