• Network: Netflix
  • Series Premiere Date: Nov 24, 2021
Metascore
54

Mixed or average reviews - based on 11 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 11
  2. Negative: 0 out of 11
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Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Nov 23, 2021
    70
    True Story mostly works as a pass-the-popcorn affair, where each apparent escape from the hangman's noose yields an unexpected twist that drags the comedian further into this nightmare, threatening the career he has struggled to build, and revealing how far he'll go to protect that.
  2. Reviewed by: Nick Allen
    Nov 29, 2021
    67
    “True Story” works best if you roll with all of that gratuitousness if you let its self-consciousness about legacy express itself with flaws.
  3. Reviewed by: Kristen Baldwin
    Nov 19, 2021
    67
    With this project, Hart proves he's more than just a funnyman, but if he decides to try drama again, he'd do well to find something that takes story a bit more seriously.
  4. Reviewed by: Lucy Mangan
    Nov 24, 2021
    60
    Hart is a presence you want to stay with, while Snipes is so compelling you don’t really have a choice but to follow him. It just feels – a little, but inescapably – unnecessary. The points of connection between Hart and the Kid, which might have led to an examination of the power of fame and money to corrupt, are too minor to add any tension or wonderment (did he really …? Could he have possibly …?) amid such a baroquely exaggerated plot.
  5. Reviewed by: Joel Keller
    Nov 24, 2021
    50
    Only because Snipes plays such a dynamic role as Carlton, and his chemistry with Hart is fun to watch. The rest of True Story feels manufactured, and Hart’s role is too close to reality to separate the Kid from Hart, especially when he’s complaining about being rich and famous.
  6. Reviewed by: Nina Metz
    Nov 24, 2021
    50
    Too bad the series, created by Eric Newman (“Narcos”), is less inspired than the idea behind it.
  7. Reviewed by: Daniel D'Addario
    Nov 24, 2021
    50
    Hart, a committed but limited actor, tends to indicate Kid’s anger through screaming, replacing shades of meaning with decibels. ... Wesley Snipes very effectively imbues [Carlton] with a long-suffering mien and a sense of perpetual calculation.
  8. Reviewed by: Joshua Alston
    Nov 23, 2021
    50
    Each episode ends with a tantalizing cliffhanger, and the momentum is hard to ignore even as the revelations and twists vacillate between the predictable and the highly contrived. But while True Story will be remembered as Hart’s first go at channeling the barely repressed rage in his stand-up comedy into a dramatic role, it won’t be remembered for much else.
  9. Reviewed by: Alan Sepinwall
    Nov 23, 2021
    50
    On the whole, though, True Story is too familiar a tale to stand out for reasons other than the two actors trapped in the middle of it, creating three new problems with each old one that they solve.
  10. Reviewed by: Tambay Obenson
    Nov 24, 2021
    42
    While Hart and co-star Wesley Snipes, in their first onscreen matchup, make for a high-octane duo, the script betrays that effort with uninspired writing from series creator, writer, and showrunner Eric Newman (“Narcos: Mexico”) that doesn’t quite make darkness its ally, and leans too much on plot conveniences and a predictability that mutes suspense.
  11. Reviewed by: Daniel Fienberg
    Nov 22, 2021
    40
    However committed Hart is to Kid’s descent into self-inflicted misery, True Story comes to life only when Snipes is around.
User Score
4.0

Mixed or average reviews- based on 4 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 4
  2. Negative: 2 out of 4
  1. Jan 9, 2022
    6
    admirable
    [ ad-mer-uh-buhl ]

    adjective
    worthy of admiration; inspiring approval, reverence, or affection.