Metascore
83

Universal acclaim - based on 9 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 9 out of 9
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 9
  3. Negative: 0 out of 9

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Ryan Lattanzio
    Feb 18, 2025
    91
    This is a world of blood and viscera, body fluids, and entrails, and Kurzel is going to show you all of it. And with a brilliant cast of actors, you’ll want to keep going where this road promises to take you.
  2. Reviewed by: Claire Waheed
    Apr 28, 2025
    90
    The Narrow Road To The Deep North is a gritty, powerful watch with striking imagery and riveting performances that sometimes read as subtle in all the best ways.
  3. Reviewed by: David Rooney
    Feb 18, 2025
    90
    There’s a lingering soulfulness here that feels new to Kurzel’s work, distilled in an intensely moving lead performance from Jacob Elordi.
  4. Reviewed by: Carol Midgley
    Jul 21, 2025
    80
    This series is terrific and on occasion magnificent. Its ability to tell a sprawling, epic story over three timelines in five shortish episodes (admirable in the era of the 14-parter) and tell us something new about a war is commendable.
  5. Reviewed by: Margaret Lyons
    May 1, 2025
    80
    There’s a visceral quality to most scenes — the clammy humidity, the golden warmth of a sandy beach, the icy sterility of a gray office — as the show teases out the pains and pleasures of the body along with its grander ideas about the mind, the heart, the world, war. “Narrow” is patient, but it isn’t slow.
  6. Reviewed by: Isabella Soares
    Apr 16, 2025
    80
    The Narrow Road to the Deep North is a tough watch, but one that doesn't hold back from displaying the cruelty of war and the dangers of blind ambition.
  7. Reviewed by: Tim Robey
    Feb 18, 2025
    80
    Hinds is already a mighty force in it, but we wait for the biggest tests regarding Elordi. His laconic restraint, which has so much potential, needs to judder and implode to give the whole story a core. If he gets us there, it will be unmissable.
  8. Reviewed by: Peter Bradshaw
    Feb 18, 2025
    80
    Kurzel handles the material with confidence and storytelling verve and gets fervent, focused performances from Elordi, Hinds and Young.
  9. Reviewed by: Marshall Shaffer
    Feb 18, 2025
    75
    Kurzel’s surveys of their gaggle, often from above in some form of coordinated motion, are exhilarating demonstrations of fraternal belonging that pop against the show’s desaturated color palette. The show could stand to humanize them a bit further, though. Only Dorrigo’s chum Frank Gardiner (Thomas Weatherall) stands out from the undifferentiated masses.