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CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
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Positive:
49
Mixed:
11
Negative:
0
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Critic Reviews
Season 3 Review:
Whitford’s casting speaks not only to the care and consideration that goes into each role, but the time and effort put into every aspect of one of the best shows on television. The Diplomat remains on top, even if its primary protagonist lives in a constant state of crisis.
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Season 3 Review:
The Diplomat is still chockfull of cliffhangers designed to keep you clicking “next episode” into the wee hours of the morning, and a mid-season time-jump feels a bit jarring, if necessary. But the series retains its sobering depiction of the geopolitical machinations that keep the globe spinning, and, like The Americans, it understands that the political is almost always personal.
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Season 1 Review:
Thanks to the fine writing and the obligatory scenes in which someone lays out just what’s happening for our benefit, we can keep up with the dizzying array of dramatic developments. ... [Keri Russell] returns to the international thriller game in fine fashion in this series set in the present day, delivering a knockout performance as a no-nonsense and seasoned diplomat.
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IndieWireOct 30, 2024
Season 2 Review:
Clocking in at six episodes instead of eight, “The Diplomat” Season 2 feels less weighty than its original incarnation. That’s good news for anyone who immediately latched onto the love triangles and will-they-or-won’t-they pairings. .... Perhaps best of all, “The Diplomat” is proof that prestige dramas don’t have to strive to do too much, and that frothy entertainment doesn’t have to settle for less.
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Season 1 Review:
The Diplomat isn't perfect — it's not directed in a way that will garner much attention, and some of the plotting is a tad predictable — but the show is more than captivating for eight episodes. In fact, the main draw here is that the show is tightly scripted, well acted, and doesn't overstay its welcome.
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Season 3 Review:
But for all the global fractures taking place in this season of “The Diplomat,” the most troubling for viewers may be the one between husband and wife. Ms. Russell makes Kate, with whom everyone is in love, adorably impatient and endlessly resourceful. As is typical of the show, the Big Picture calamity is balanced by the Small Moment of humanizing tenderness. .... Ms. Russell is terrific, but she would be less so without Mr. Sewell.
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Season 2 Review:
It’s quite refreshing that The Diplomat’s second season keeps itself so compact. Maybe that simply had to do with the Hollywood strikes last year, but whatever the reasoning behind the reduction to six episodes, it’s a choice that pays off. We’re whisked away into embassy adventure and then, with a merry swiftness, are served an even better finale shocker than the first season’s.
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Season 2 Review:
“The Diplomat”—eight parts in 2023, and a penurious six parts now—is utterly entertaining, absorbing and a novel construct populated by characters with whom you want to spend time, who seem eminently human and who operate under one perfectly plausible principle: No one can trust anyone else.
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RogerEbert.comOct 30, 2024
Season 2 Review:
Russell and Sewell are the center, but “The Diplomat” doesn’t work without a great ensemble. Standouts this season include an empathetic portrayal of PTSD by Essandoh and a wonderfully feisty performance from Kinnear. However, the show-stealing thief of the season is someone who worked with Cahn on “The West Wing”: Oscar and Emmy winner Allison Janney.
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The Daily BeastApr 19, 2023
Season 1 Review:
The series is a tough nut to crack at first, and many will find that exterior completely impenetrable. This is not a 1.5x speed background watch. But once you remember that every line in an esoteric drama like this isn’t supposed to make sense the moment it falls out of someone’s mouth, The Diplomat transforms from palatable to remarkable.
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Season 2 Review:
The dialogue remains crisp and snappy, and the pacing is nonstop in the very best way. Season 2 is only six episodes long, compared to Season 1's eight, and the brevity becomes a strength, allowing for the focus the show needs to pull off the main storyline. But more than anything, it's the performances that really sell this series.
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The PlaylistOct 30, 2024
Season 2 Review:
How that narrative is resolved is fascinating and well worth not being spoiled on. The show provides a multitude of red herrings that are truly absurd in the best way. An escalating series of twists in the back half of the six-episode season had me rolling my eyes while simultaneously hitting ‘next episode’ immediately once the option came up.
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Season 2 Review:
By fusing their relationship to its larger political plots, The Diplomat makes some goofy choices, especially in the season’s eye-roll-worthy finale. But the fast-paced storylines, while perhaps not grounded in reality, result in an entertaining, easy-to-watch thriller with one hell of a Russell performance.
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Season 1 Review:
Intertwining the dueling demands of idealism and pragmatism with the equally pressing interpersonal dynamics that inevitably shape realpolitik outcomes. It makes for a rich stew of international intrigue and rolled-up-sleeves diplomatic finagling, all held together by a talented ensemble.
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Season 2 Review:
It’s a well-acted show with some reasonably intricate foreign relations plotting at its core that would have been right at home on network television in the 2000s or 2010s, save for a few f-bombs here and there. Our opinion of the show hasn’t really changed in that regard, though we do think that the plot is now getting so intricate, the show may be nudging itself more towards the “prestige TV’ end of the spectrum.
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Season 1 Review:
The pace is crisp; the acting is fine, striking a balance between dramatic immersion and wink-and-nudge rom-com. I went with it, binged all eight episodes of Season 1, and didn’t hate myself afterward (except until the very end of the final episode, with its three cliffhangers, none of which makes the slightest bit of sense).
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Season 2 Review:
For fans of this kind of twisty, soap operatic show (characters are constantly talking about their romances even in the midst of global tension), season 2 delivers many of the charms of the first season. Russell is still great, and the show continues to zig when you think it’ll zag. But it’s a high churn plot machine, and the twists are starting to overwhelm the characters.
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Season 2 Review:
The new season is also a more confident and convincing version of itself. It’s still not without flaws, chief among them an uncritical reverence for both the American security state and Kate as its avatar. (The first is a political concern, which may lie beyond the scope of a review; the second is a dramatic one, and thus fair game.) But “The Diplomat” now satisfies its own brief more successfully than ever.
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Season 1 Review:
A political thriller laced with romance and written, with some success, in an Aaron Sorkinesque high-comic, high-velocity style. ... Russell is not as funny as the show needs her to be. ... Luckily for “The Diplomat,” Sewell has no trouble getting in touch with his inner Barrymore, and he walks away with the show.
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Season 1 Review:
“The Diplomat” loses a bit of its luster every time Russell and Sewell are kept apart too long, which becomes a more glaring issue when the international crisis reaches its climax in the final two episodes. Even so, I can’t help rooting for a second season of ”The Diplomat,” which ends with a satisfyingly twist and game-changing, if emotionally manipulative cliffhanger. As long as you go into your next binge looking for a series more akin to “Scandal” than “Bodyguard,” you’re in for an entertaining ride.
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RogerEbert.comApr 19, 2023
Season 1 Review:
It’s an extremely talky show. ... Luckily, the creators hired an ensemble of performers to make this kind of intellectual discourse genuine. So even as “The Diplomat” circles the same drains of dissent and diplomacy, it remains interesting for anyone intrigued by what makes the political world tick.
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Season 1 Review:
The series leans a little more than I would like into the perfunctory and escalating thrills of the plot, reaching a contrived cliffhanger that I’m weirdly confident will be poorly resolved. At the same time, I want to see how it’s resolved because The Diplomat makes it clear that Kate and the audience still have a lot to learn about this world.
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