Metacritic TV

Kings

SERIES: NBC, Sunday 8:00p (60 minutes)

Starring Ian McShane, Chris Egan, Sebastian Stan, Susanna Thompson, Allison Miller, Eamonn Walker, Wes Studi, Dylan Baker, and Miguel Ferrer

Created by Michael Green

Genre(s): Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy

FIRST AIR DATE: March 15, 2009

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

58 / 100

Critic Reviews

83 Entertainment Weekly Ken Tucker
So far, that universe is pleasingly treacherous, though not 
wholly formed, a work in progress that's worth seeing through to completion.
80 Salon Heather Havrilesky
The dialogue is just so artful and poetic, the characters are so appealing, the whole damn package is so original and daring and lovely, that after watching the first four hours, it's impossible not to feel inspired and cheered by the fact that a drama this ambitious and unique could make it onto network TV.
75 New York Post Kyle Smith
The show sparkles with imagination. But Kings may be too campy for some, not campy enough for others.
75 Newsday Verne Gay
Kings is a worthy enterprise that will deeply puzzle millions of viewers.
75 Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
Happily, this generally well-told tale of a modern-day king and his restive court has more going for it than a charismatic performance from the dependably wonderful “Deadwood” star.
70 Philadelphia Daily News Ellen Gray
NBC, which could have ripped off yet another "reality" show for 8 p.m. Sundays, instead bought into something imaginative and intriguing and, yes, a little crazy.
70 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
Kings does dip in and out of predictability, when familiar Spelling soap operatics and political machinations break through the show's unique surface. But it still is a fascinating effort.
70 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
Kings begins with a refined approach and grows more pedestrian in subsequent episodes. Still, there's plenty to love about this series that dances with symbolism--the butterfly on the Gilboa flag is not a mere adornment--and replaces clandestine backrooms with windowed board rooms.
70 PopMatters Marisa LaScala
Combing broad strokes and detailed color on an extensive canvas, Kings makes the rewards and costs of ambition plain for all to see.
67 Time James Poniewozik
Kings is fascinating pretentious hoo-ha.
63 USA Today Robert Bianco
Kings is a mess, but for a few weeks, anyway, it promises to be a fun, fascinating mess, the kind of "can you believe they're doing it" show you want to discuss the next day.
60 Variety Brian Lowry
Viewers will have to survive a rocky, at-times jarring first hour before the series begins coalescing into something interesting--flawed but unpredictable, with a characteristically intense Ian McShane at its core.
60 Washington Post Debra Leithauser
The acting at times is overdone, and some of the pivotal plot moments come across as downright hokey.
60 Newark Star-Ledger Alan Sepinwall
Despite a wonderful cast put to good use, a very well-designed parallel world and some marvelous turns of phrase, I can't help admiring Kings more than I actually liked it.
60 Los Angeles Times Robert Lloyd
It's corny, ponderous, literary, ambitious, obvious and, at the beginning at least, as slow as molasses, but continually re-energized by Ian McShane as King Saul, or, as he's known here, King Silas Benjamin
60 New York Daily News David Hinckley
Some scenes are brilliantly and subtly turned, some make you roll your eyes. Some are straight from the Soap Opera 101 playbook.
50 Wall Street Journal Nancy DeWolf Smith
Kings, which also serves up melodrama and mystical happenings, is far more ambitious [than Aaron Spellings' shows]. Yet it can have the effect of a real sleep potion.
50 The New York Times Alessandra Stanley
The series itself seems divided: at times a supersize fable told with portentous, and even turgid, simplicity, while at others, a sophisticated spoof that uses ancient legend to send up modern politics. And when a series cannot be both, it ends up being neither.
50 Chicago Sun-Times Teresa Budasi
The language on Kings is similarly stilted but lacks "Deadwood" writer/producer David Milch's passionate and intellectual punch. King Silas may not be as deliciously Machiavellian as Al Swearingen, but McShane does deliver--and he cleans up well.
50 San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
It's visually engrossing. Then it goes oddly flat in parts, only to kick-start itself with another clash of tones.
50 Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
Sadly, as so often happens, the grandeur and surprise settle toward soapiness when the show moves into future episodes, as various high-level evildoers battle each other for power, money, and hot sex partners, while the good-hearted folk fret and risk their lives for more noble causes.
40 New York Magazine Emily Nussbaum
Sadly, the show is carved out of pure phony gravitas--like "The West Wing," only more sanctimonious.
40 Orlando Sentinel Hal Boedeker
NBC deserves points for trying something different, but the results are often pretentious and silly. The best moments belong to Egan, who handles his chores simply and directly.
30 Baltimore Sun David Zurawik
If only Green had not made such a cold, bland stew of such rich and tasty ingredients.
30 Hollywood Reporter Ray Richmond
Pretentious and far too taken with its own sense of menace, the show casts every line of dialogue as a pronouncement, every action as an uppercut to the chops.
30 Kansas City Star Aaron Barnhart
Kings is oddly tedious, thanks to a supporting cast of uninteresting characters and a script loaded with heavy-handed analogies to health-care reform, Halliburton and the Clintons.
30 Miami Herald Glenn Garvin
Just about everybody is having sex with everybody else: Kings is one giant raging id of a show.

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