Season #: 4, 3, 2, 1
Metascore
tbd

No score yet - based on 3 Critic Reviews

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

  1. Reviewed by: Dorothy Rabinowitz
    May 17, 2018
    80
    For all its wandering through hopeless plotlines like Rose’s endless adventures planning her wedding, an effort at inspired abandon that grows more ghastly by the minute--and there are a lot of those--The Split in time finds its footing as powerful drama.
  2. TV Guide Magazine
    Reviewed by: Matt Roush
    May 10, 2018
    70
    An addictive guilty pleasure. [14 - 27 May 2018, p.11]
  3. Reviewed by: Allison Keene
    May 23, 2018
    60
    The caliber of the cast and Jessica Hobbs’ lush and active direction elevate The Split from being a little too soapy and predictable when it comes to the drama of the DeFoe’s personal lives. Each member of the cast brings an emotional honesty to their performance, particularly Walker.
User Score
6.7

Generally favorable reviews- based on 6 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 4 out of 6
  2. Negative: 1 out of 6
  1. Jan 9, 2019
    10
    So often in a drama there is a character that doesn't make sense (for me, this is Toby in "This Is Us") or plot points that don't compute (asSo often in a drama there is a character that doesn't make sense (for me, this is Toby in "This Is Us") or plot points that don't compute (as in "The Bodyguard," later episodes especially). And/or there are scenes I long to leave (typically featuring the 'C storyline') to get back to more interesting stuff, or scenes featuring the main characters or plot that nevertheless feel interminable. Worst of all, there are series where the action moves so very, *very* slowly, that when something actually happens I almost don't notice ("Save Me," a Sky Atlantic show, has that problem, plus a bit of the 'nonsensical characters' one also.)

    "The Split" is so amazingly well-written and compelling that it doesn't trigger any of these problems. Every episode is split (ha) just right between dealing with the characters' interpersonal issues, the 'case of the week' (the show revolves around divorces and custody battles), and a longer arc related to a high profile divorce. The interpersonal issues include professional rivalry between solicitors (who just happen to be sisters), romantic relationships, and the reappearance of a father who abandoned the main character and her sisters decades earlier. The individual cases are interesting and typically both amusing and thought-provoking to varying degrees. And given that the high profile divorce is between characters played by actors I've enjoyed watching for decades (Meera Syal and Stephen Tompkinson), it just couldn't get any better really.

    Did I expect to rave over and recommend a show about a London solicitor specializing in family law, who leaves her family firm to work for a larger company when her mother won't relinquish the reins of power? Nope. But check out an episode (I saw it over several British Airways flights, but it seems to now be streaming on hulu) and I think you'll be sucked in by it too.
    Full Review »
  2. Dec 23, 2022
    10
    British drama is the best and this one doesn’t disappoint. Intriguing characters and storyline keeping me engaged and curious to watch theBritish drama is the best and this one doesn’t disappoint. Intriguing characters and storyline keeping me engaged and curious to watch the next episode, and the next… Full Review »