• Network: NBC
  • Series Premiere Date: Apr 16, 1990
Metascore
34

Generally unfavorable reviews - based on 9 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 9
  2. Negative: 6 out of 9

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Howard Rosenberg
    May 4, 2014
    50
    More often than not, however, most of the laughs are junior too.
  2. Seattle Post-Intelligencer
    Reviewed by: John Engstrom
    May 4, 2014
    50
    What may be missing most in the TV mix is the supporting cast and behind-the-camera work that launched Griffith's acting rocket in the movie. [16 Apr 1990, p.C4]
  3. Orlando Sentinel
    Reviewed by: Greg Dawson
    May 4, 2014
    40
    What it took Griffith more than two hours to achieve in the movie - finagling her way from the secretarial pool to the board room - TV's working girl (Sandra Bullock) does in 30 minutes. There seems little point in continuing after that. It's hard to imagine, or care, where the story goes from here. [15 Apr 1990, p.F1]
  4. San Diego Union-Tribune
    Reviewed by: Robert P. Laurence
    May 4, 2014
    30
    Overlaying Working Girl is a subtle, cynical atmosphere of class snobbery...The writers' assumption seems to be that their viewers share their elitist values and viewpoint. [15 Apr 1990, p.TV-8]
  5. USA Today
    Reviewed by: Matt Roush
    May 4, 2014
    30
    Bad enough that dark-haired Sandra Bullock lacks the fuzzy but tough quirkiness of Melanie Griffith's Tess. And that Nana Visitor's boss lady, a two-faced Yalie named Bryn, has none of the swagger and venomous sting of Sigourney Weaver's comic caricature...But to make matters worse, by the end of the opener these two now- conventional gals are more allies than adversaries. [16 Apr 1990, p.3D]
  6. Newsday
    Reviewed by: Andy Edelstein
    May 4, 2014
    30
    The writers try to limn the blue-collar vs. white-collar struggle that gave the movie its bite, but end up sounding mushy and sentimental. [16 Apr 1990, p.11]
  7. The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    Reviewed by: John Haslett
    May 4, 2014
    30
    [Bullock]'s not even remotely believable as a blue-collar kid. [16 Apr 1990]
  8. Chicago Tribune
    Reviewed by: Rick Kogan
    May 4, 2014
    30
    It's but an embryo of the real thing. [16 Apr 1990, p.C7]
  9. Washington Post
    Reviewed by: Tom Shales
    May 4, 2014
    20
    It wasn't much of a movie, but Griffith's dewy-eyed charm saved it. By sharp contrast, the TV version has precisely zero compensations, unless one hungers for further proof that NBC programmers are getting softer and softer in the noggin. [16 Apr 1990, p.B8]