- Network: SHOWTIME
- Series Premiere Date: Aug 7, 2005
User Score
Generally favorable reviews- based on 86 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 61 out of 86
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Mixed: 18 out of 86
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Negative: 7 out of 86
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User Reviews
- User score
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- Most helpful
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JunomJun 13, 2009great. The show is just exquisite on every level. The music would be grand but its whoring to much attention. But its still magnificent. Love the show, I take it to chair every night. Can't wait to watch the new episodes.
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hardcandyJun 13, 2009creative, brilliant writing. I'm proud to be a fan of this show. This season is a slow start but quickly gets right back to its greatness. I bow down and kiss its crotch.
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JoseDJun 9, 2009
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daveytJun 13, 2009I really expected something great then I got something that tucked me in bed and gave me a bl**jo*. It was much better than great.
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MattKJul 23, 2009The plot gets to be pretty ridiculous. If you don't let that bother you, it's still an addicting show with about five good laughs an episode. (And I have no idea whatsoever what other posters mean with comments about the soundtrack obscuring dialogue. I have never had a problem comprehending what's going on.)
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ZacharyP.Jul 28, 2009
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EssjaySonJul 12, 2009One of the best shows on television hands down. Sexy, hilarious, dark and oftentimes downright rude. What other show could have you splitting a rib WHILE sitting on the edge of your seat WITH GOOSEBUMPS? Enough Said.
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Apr 16, 2011Enjoyable season. I feel like it fell off a bit, but it was still good. There wasn't that much suspense until the end. Very good and surprising ending. I jumped.
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Mar 21, 2011×
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It's the funniest thing you'll see all summer--particularly if you're drug-free.
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Creator Jenji Kohan has kept it all going so far, the supporting cast remains the funniest on TV, and Parker, with her carefully calculated stillness and sudden reckless displays of fearlessness, is more riveting than ever.
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It's still a reasonably funny show, thanks to first-rate performances from Mary-Louise Parker as Nancy Botwin, a woman who deals drugs, and Elizabeth Perkins as Celia Hodes, a woman who uses them. [But] It's getting harder to maintain a sharp seriocomic edge when Botwin keeps slipping further into a world where there just aren't a lot of inherent laughs.