For 638 reviews, this critic has graded:
  • 43% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 8 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)

Matthew Gilbert's Scores

  • TV
Average review score: 56
Highest review score:
Lowest review score:
Critic Score 0
Score distribution:
638 tv reviews
    • Metascore: 96
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    The show is back in magnificent form, with all its humor, psychological thorniness, and bleak tragedy intact. It remains the highest peak of series TV.
    • Metascore: 88
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    Riveting, gripping, and altogether compelling ... An innovative and expertly executed hour of suspense, '24' is without question the best premiere of the fall season. [6 Nov 2001]
    • Metascore: 87
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    The future of TV comedy is a sick one, my friends. A gloriously, brilliantly, deliriously sick one, where a desperate housewife wears a "SLUT" T-shirt on a prison visit, a businessman sells prefab homes to Saddam Hussein, and a pudgy teen lusts after his first cousin. It's a ferociously Freudian future, replete with a pent-up mama's boy, a family-run banana stand, and a disbarred psychiatrist who wears cutoffs beneath his underwear because he's a "Never-nude." That's a phobia about nakedness he's trying to make into a nationally recognized condition...In short, it's Arrested Development. [7 Nov 2004, p.N4]
    • Metascore: 93
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    It's hard to know where to aim the praise first.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    This is a great piece of TV work... Right from its opening minutes, after a flight to Australia has crashed on the shores of nowhere, ABC's Lost simulates the kind of dread we don't expect to find on the small screen. [22 Sept 2004, p.E1]
    • Metascore: 88
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    The NBC series certainly has been one of TV’s most emotionally honest and stirring works, and it remains so as it enters its fourth season.
    • Metascore: 92
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    This extraordinary upstairs-downstairs drama, written by Oscar-winning "Gosford Park" screenwriter Julian Fellowes, is a dramatic, intelligent, soapy, comic, and wise piece of work, one that explores social shifts on the eve of World War I while delivering a remarkably engaging cast of characters.
    • Metascore: 83
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    Gabriel Byrne is in every minute of the show, delivering one of TV's most faceted and intriguing performances....All of the new characters promise to engage as their stories and backstories begin to unfold.
    • Metascore: 73
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    It offers a great cast, and some very tight, tart scripting. Each of the season's seven half-hours is a little sliver of pleasure.
    • Metascore: 96
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    A taut exercise in withheld disaster, Breaking Bad is riveting.
    • Metascore: 79
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    Ultimately, though, even with the fantasy, Game of Thrones feels like a historical medieval saga. It's a royal, and royally good, round of musical chairs.
    • Metascore: 91
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    Of all the drama pilots I watched, this was my favorite.
    • Metascore: 96
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    The show doesn't seem to have lost any ballast moving forward from the intensity of season one.
    • Metascore: 90
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    The show beautifully depicts a massive game of musical chairs, a world at war with doom ever present just across the border.
    • Metascore: 87
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    AMC’s Mad Men returns for season 6 with two hours that are as rich and as deftly literary as anything in the history of the show. The premiere operates like a series of exquisitely written theatrical set pieces, one after another that add up to a moving, ironic, and often comic group portrait.
    • Metascore: 82
    • Matthew Gilbert 100
    Beautifully written (by Richard LaGravenese) and directed (by Steven Soderbergh), Behind the Candelabra doesn’t quite fit into the biopic genre--simply because it is so good.
    • Metascore: 70
    • Matthew Gilbert 91
    I love the suburban satire, which is old territory made fresh again. [Jane] Levy, from "Shameless," is tart and sympathetic, and [Cheryl] Hines is a revelation as a rabidly superficial mom.
    • Metascore: 78
    • Matthew Gilbert 91
    The script is tight and ambitious, as it attempts to anatomize corruption in the big city.
    • Metascore: 75
    • Matthew Gilbert 91
    Dern is fantastic as Amy--you cringe as her histrionics drive people away, and cringe again as she tries to suppress her feelings behind a veneer of New Age peacefulness.
    • Metascore: 63
    • Matthew Gilbert 91
    I don't know if it will catch on - westerns can be a hard sell - but it's another fine AMC choice.
    • Metascore: 86
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    Ed has enough potential to qualify as scary. Scary in a "Freaks & Geeks" maybe-I-shouldn't-get-too-attached kind of way. What I mean is that one of this fall's more promising new series is a romantic comedy that NBC seems ready to chuck to the wolves, as it did so tragically to "F&G" last year. [6 Oct 2000, p.D1]
    • Metascore: 78
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    A smart, exhilarating, well-written hour that, if anything, is a little naive about the folks who run our nation's most important office. [22 Sept 1999, p.E1]
    • Metascore: 88
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    Along with its refreshing cast, led by Keri Russell, the WB's Felicity is blessed with a sweet realism that captures the emotional roller coaster that is freshman year in college. It also offers an appealingly non-gritty look at New York City, as seen through the eyes of optimism and innocence...The show transcends formula by staying steadily focused on its characters' shifting emotional realities, and by avoiding the issue-of-the-week plot twists of a series like "Beverly Hills 90210." [29 Sept 1998, p.C1]
    • Metascore: 88
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    No, The Sopranos is not the equal of Scorsese's masterpiece ["Goodfellas"], but it manages to bring a new spin to the words "dysfunctional" and "family," and it deserves its place alongside other HBO gems like "The Larry Sanders Show" and "Sex and the City." [9 Jan 1999, p.C1]
    • Metascore: 88
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    In its own affectionate way, Freaks and Geeks puts a pimple into the TV-ized approach to adolescence. This delightfully observed 1980s-set dramedy is high school as many of us remember it, with Twinkie-pounding bullies and Army-jacket wearing druggies and pale nerds with speech impediments and "Star Trek" fixations. It's high school unplugged, a sort of "Dazed and Confused" for the small screen, and it is one of the fall season's most likable new shows. That NBC has thrown "Freaks and Geeks" into the wilds of Saturday night - it premieres tonight at 8 on Ch. 7 - is only further evidence of network nitwitness. [25 Sept 1999, p.C1]
    • Metascore: 76
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    Can Alias work on a weekly basis? While the Alias pilot plunges forward effortlessly, it also leads to some fairly complicated twists involving Sydney's father (Victor Garber) and the nature of her agency. These twists could make future episodes overly layered, or too dependent on backstory. Also, any CIA suspense series, with or without a flashy pilot, faces the challenge of coming up with 20 or so fresh espionage plots each season - no easy task.
    • Metascore: 64
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    A wonderful, imaginative mess brimming with possibility. About a dysfunctional family of space cowboys, the sci-fi series arrives not fully formed, like an elaborate photo that's still clarifying in developing fluid. While many shows burst onto the scene with slick pilots and quickly deteriorate into mediocrity, I'm thinking Firefly is on the opposite creative journey.
    • Metascore: 83
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    It's an extraordinarily appealing series, one that's so much more than its easy label as a teen private-eye series. [22 Sept 2004, p.D12]
    • Metascore: 77
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    The NBC sitcom is so unpretentious and original, it will probably win you over on its own sweet merits.
    • Metascore: 81
    • Matthew Gilbert 90
    'Extras" is far less terminally existential than ''The Office," less depressing to watch.