• Network: PBS
  • Series Premiere Date: Nov 16, 2025
Metascore
80

Generally favorable reviews - based on 15 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 15
  2. Negative: 0 out of 15

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Matt Roush
    Nov 17, 2025
    100
    The American Revolution achieves that goal brilliantly, sidestepping romanticism of the period (see Outlander) and stripping away myth with a grounding in granular reality. While never losing focus on heroes like George Washington, whose triumphs and mistakes are scrutinized by a diverse faculty of scholars, the series brings history to life through the accounts of lesser-known participants.
  2. Reviewed by: G. Allen Johnson
    Nov 14, 2025
    100
    Even history buffs can gain a deeper understanding of the country and its origins through this ambitious, epic docuseries that runs for six straight nights on PBS.
  3. Reviewed by: Hunter Ingram
    Nov 12, 2025
    100
    The filmmakers create a masterful narrative of the war’s tactical beats interwoven with the human touch and the necessary myth-busting about the cornerstones of our history.
  4. Reviewed by: Nick Schager
    Nov 17, 2025
    88
    At once thorough, nuanced, and moving, investigating the paradigm-shifting uprising from numerous micro and macro angles that bring it to vibrant, inspiring life.
  5. Reviewed by: Brian Tallerico
    Nov 17, 2025
    88
    “The American Revolution” is rich with detail and vibrant with intellectual filmmaking that seeks to serve as a definitive record of its subject.
  6. Reviewed by: Aramide Tinubu
    Nov 19, 2025
    80
    As with many of Burns’ works, like “The Civil War,” “The American Buffalo” and even “Jazz,” “The American Revolution” is as intricate as it is dense.
  7. Reviewed by: Matthew Creith
    Nov 17, 2025
    80
    At two hours per episode, “The American Revolution” is a considerable commitment, to say the least, and Burns’ familiar narrative rhythms, with their slow pans, solemn music and heavy commentary, can feel like a relic of another era of television. Millennials and Generation X might recognize this style from the many times a history teacher wheeled a large television into a drafty carpetless classroom, yet, within that formality lies a deep sincerity.
  8. Reviewed by: James Poniewozik
    Nov 14, 2025
    80
    The series makes its case the way Burns’s whole body of work has: by trying to tell a full story and trusting, maybe with quaint optimism, that all kinds of Americans will want to hear it. The series might well draw controversy pointing out the founders’ contradictions. But “The American Revolution” is also deeply patriotic. It gushes with love for America’s natural beauty, for its democracy and for its professed, if not always realized, ideals.
  9. Reviewed by: Chris Vognar
    Nov 14, 2025
    80
    It is a dense, exhaustive, and, yes, highly rewarding march through a period of early American history that treats generalizations and cliches the way patriot mobs treated suspected loyalists.
  10. Reviewed by: Robert Lloyd
    Nov 14, 2025
    80
    Contemporary battlefield sketches, grand post-war history paintings, elegant portraits of the major military and political figures, along with watercolor illustrations and unobtrusive live-action recreations bring the tale to life. As in other Burns projects, the narrative is knit together out of many individual stories, but it’s Washington, the commander of the army, who stands out here.
  11. Reviewed by: Bill Goodykoontz
    Nov 12, 2025
    80
    At times Burns uses reenactments, in a somewhat generic way. And despite the length, things move pretty swiftly. Still, we learn more about how bloody the fighting was, how violent, as well as the deep divisions between communities and even families. And while there is no shortage of heroic, if flawed, figures, what holds the film together is what held the colonies together: ideals, which live longer than men.
  12. Reviewed by: Ben Travers
    Nov 17, 2025
    75
    Whether you sampled his encyclopedic examinations via “The Civil War,” “Baseball,” “Jazz,” “Mark Twain,” “The Vietnam War,” or something else, little should surprise you about how “The American Revolution” rolls out.
  13. Reviewed by: Joel Keller
    Nov 17, 2025
    70
    The American Revolution is yet another example of how Ken Burns and his collaborators take what we already know about a historic event and, through meticulous research and extensive interviews with historians, goes really deep into the topic in an entertaining way.
  14. Reviewed by: Daniel Fienberg
    Nov 6, 2025
    70
    The American Revolution is smart, thorough, sincere in intent, and still of undeniable and uncomfortable importance with or without direct reference to the current political moment. At 12 hours, it’s also dry and a little languid, relying on storytelling techniques.
  15. Reviewed by: John Anderson
    Nov 13, 2025
    40
    Their sanctimonious approach to history becomes very tiresome very quickly. This is unfortunate, and not just because it affects the viewing experience, which is as numbing as a winter at Fort Ticonderoga. .... The Burns-Botstein-Schmidt review is certainly enlightening, at least about who did what and where and why—the military strategies can be fascinating, though. .... When the most energized aspect of a documentary series is the talking heads, it says something.