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CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
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Positive:
21
Mixed:
7
Negative:
0
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Critic Reviews
Season 1 Review:
“The Day of the Jackal” is so relentlessly good, with the exception of the music, that you really don’t want to ask yourself the obvious questions—such as “Why am I rooting for this scoundrel?” Well, because his antagonists are so charmless and his talent is so blindingly brilliant. The show is a marvel of editing and cinematography—teams were responsible for both. The actors are first-rate.
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TV Guide MagazineNov 14, 2024
Season 1 Review:
We're never quite sure if we're rooting for the master sniper to get caught or to succeed. Much of this ambiguity is rooted in Eddie Redmayne's compelling, enigmatic performance. [18 Nov - 8 Dec 2024, p.4]
Season 1 Review:
With the luxury of a 10-episode run, “Day of the Jackal” has room for a number of subplots, but it never feels like the unnecessary padding that occurs in many limited series that should be more, well, limited. In addition to the virtuoso cinematography, the crackling good dialogue and universally terrific performances, the series makes great use of music.
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Season 1 Review:
You spend much of the series wondering what exactly makes the Jackal tick. Is he simply a monstrous, unfeeling killer? A family man in disguise? A straight-up psychopath? Redmayne is fascinatingly coy — warm one moment and then haunting the next. .... Lynch’s take on Bianca is a stirring mix of impulsivity and cunning. They are the twin engines propelling the plot.
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The Observer (UK)Nov 12, 2024
Season 1 Review:
Sometimes you get the impression that Bennett wants to get as far away from Top Boy and the drug gangs of the Summerhouse estate as he can, to the point where you feel you’re indulging in a Mission: Impossible film marathon. Still, for assassin fare, it’s all very classily done, and, like the Jackal himself, takes no prisoners.
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iNov 8, 2024
Season 1 Review:
This is no doubt one of Redmayne’s finest performances and while his assassin is stoic and unfeeling, his unsettling shapeshifting into multiple aliases allows him to flex every acting muscle he has. When we’re given access to his complex killing set ups – false flag attempts and sniper rifles that fold away to nothing – The Day of the Jackal is a thrill ride all the way to the end.
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The GuardianNov 7, 2024
Season 1 Review:
The cinematography is as stunning as the food is exquisite and familiar. There is no compulsion to reinvent, no needless experimental energy. The series feels instead like a lush and leisurely expansion. But the beats — and the dishes — remains the same. There is one exception. Tita, in Guaita’s hands, is quicker, more volatile and more stubborn than Lumi Cavazos’s comparatively sedate version in the film. Guaita certainly delivers a charming performance.
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RogerEbert.comNov 4, 2024
ColliderNov 1, 2024
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