• Network: CBS
  • Series Premiere Date: Aug 25, 1993
Metascore
47

Mixed or average reviews - based on 11 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 11
  2. Negative: 4 out of 11

Critic Reviews

  1. Los Angeles Times
    Reviewed by: Howard Rosenberg
    Jan 26, 2022
    70
    The broad ending is the kind of silly piffle that only the likes of Robin Williams could pull off, and the show's plethora of bawdy double entendres regarding the male anatomy is ill suited to a time period so accessible to young kids. All in all, though, it's a good start, the key being that both Pinchot and the writing are effortlessly witty. [25 Aug 1993, p.F10]
  2. Reviewed by: Tony Scott
    Jan 26, 2022
    70
    The actor and the sharp script should grab audiences quickly: The sitcom has humor, good characters — and Pinchot.
  3. Newsday
    Reviewed by: Andy Edelstein
    Jan 26, 2022
    63
    Indeed, with his mugging and childlike innocence, Pinchot is sort of cute, especially if your age hasn't yet reached double digits. [25 Aug 1993, p.90]
  4. Chicago Sun-Times
    Reviewed by: Lon Grahnke
    Jan 26, 2022
    50
    The result is a chaotic debut that's high on energy, antics and sight gags and low on plausible situations and clever writing. [25 Aug 1993, p.39]
  5. The Hollywood Reporter
    Reviewed by: Miles Beller
    Jan 26, 2022
    50
    Though featuring the comedic talents of Bronson Pinchot (formerly of the elliptical Perfect Strangers), Pinchot's latest primetime outing lacks anything more than a germ of a funny idea that essentially allows the actor to make like Robin Williams and do zany. [24 Aug 1993]
  6. St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    Reviewed by: Gail Pennington
    Jan 26, 2022
    50
    The trouble with "The Trouble With Larry" is that all these jokes don't add up to many laughs. [29 Aug 1993, p.8C]
  7. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
    Reviewed by: Robert Bianco
    Jan 26, 2022
    40
    Well, you won't find a much funnier lead than Pinchot, but even a comic genius needs something and someone with which to work. With the supporting cast offering no support at all, Pinchot pushes egregiously, until even this funny man isn't funny anymore. [25 Aug 1993, p.
  8. Reviewed by: Ken Tucker
    Jan 26, 2022
    33
    Watching Pinchot flail through lousy punch lines and Cox endure ogling, you may find The Trouble With Larry not just not-funny, but actively depressing
  9. Seattle Post-Intelligencer
    Reviewed by: John Engstrom
    Jan 26, 2022
    25
    Bronson Pinchot left Perfect Strangers behind, but he's still addicted to his Balki shtick. As a husband who returns after being presumed dead for a decade, only to find his wife remarried, he shamelessly steals every scene, pillaging the rest of the cast and overloading the action until it sinks in a sea of sophomoric Pinchosity. [01 Sep 1993]
  10. USA Today
    Reviewed by: Matt Roush
    Jan 26, 2022
    25
    Pinchot, given little to work with, is like Mork on Prozac, a quart-low Jerry Lewis. The trouble with Larry is it thinks it's a riot. Think again. [25 Aug 1993, p.3D]
  11. Reviewed by: David Zurawik
    Jan 26, 2022
    25
    How did this sitcom (using the word in its most expansive sense) ever make it on the CBS fall schedule?