Metacritic TV

Life

SERIES: NBC, Wednesday 10:00p (60 minutes)

Starring Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Robin Weigert, Adam Arkin, Brent Sexton, and Melissa Sagemiller

Created by Rand Ravich

Genre(s): Drama

FIRST AIR DATE: September 26, 2007

Overall Metascore

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

64 / 100

Critic Reviews

83 Entertainment Weekly Ken Tucker
Life is intelligent fun.
80 Wall Street Journal Nancy DeWolf Smith
Of all the new shows I've watched, it's also the one I'm most eager to see again.
80 Variety Laura Fries
Crews quirky mannerisms don't overwhelm the plot, and the show does strikes a nice balance between whimsy and its much darker backstory.
80 Hollywood Reporter Barry Garron
It's an entirely different vibe, further enhanced by a charismatic and quirky central character who is both unpredictable and impossible to pigeonhole. Given a chance to develop, Detective Charlie Crews could someday take a place with the likes of Kojak, Columbo and Monk.
80 Los Angeles Times Mary McNamara
Playing it long and lugubrious but with a tantalizing twinkle, Lewis (last seen in the States as the hateful husband in "The Forsyte Saga") may well wrest the mantle of sexiest troubled American played by a Brit away from Hugh Laurie.
80 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
The actor [Lewis], who uses a flawless American accent, makes Life worth a gander. And he is surrounded by a distinctive cast.
80 Miami Herald Glenn Garvin
This peculiar comedy-drama has some cockeyed wrinkles that make it interesting.
80 The New York Times Ginia Bellafante
The narrative structure of the show is incredibly satisfying: During each hour a crime is committed and solved, as Charlie’s search for who might have framed him provides the overriding arch, satisfying our short attention spans and taste for long-form narrative at once.
75 Detroit Free Press Mike Duffy
Lewis is terrific. But his brazenly loopy lawman may not be to everyone's offbeat crime drama tastes.
75 New York Daily News David Hinckley
Life doesn't squander the talents of its cast. The mysteries are solid, the characters multilayered, and Crews is given a bigger mystery about which to obsess--finding out who framed him.
70 Newsday Tom Jicha
Lewis is such a commanding presence that Sarah Shahi is rendered little more than an accessory as Dani. There's nothing going on between the partners at the outset, but this is subject to change.
70 PopMatters Cynthia Fuchs
Details of color and composition do the work usually handled by too much expository dialogue, granting access to Dani and Charlie’s thinking.
70 New York Magazine John Leonard
Just as we begin to wonder whether Life is intended to be, um, wacky, it takes a darker turn.
60 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
While one can never count out a decent cop show, Life's main character is so weird he either fascinates you immediately or turns you off.
60 Kansas City Star Aaron Barnhart
There’s no doubt Life is blessed with a fine lead actor, an intriguing premise and better writing than most new shows this fall. It’s just that viewers aren’t going to find that promising TV drama buried underneath all the crime procedural.
60 Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
Mildly satisfying, but pretty formulaic.
60 Newark Star-Ledger Alan Sepinwall
Lewis is a strong enough actor (again, see "Band of Brothers") that there are moments where he pulls together all these tics into a character who could be interesting, but too much time gets wasted on pedestrian mysteries to give him room to work.
37 USA Today Robert Bianco
Strip away the abrasive flourishes, and what's left is a standard-issue TV mystery with cases that are too easy to solve and internal conflicts and conspiracies that make no sense.
30 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
It gets bogged down by so many procedural elements that all the character moments get squished and forced out around the edges, resulting in an uninteresting blob of an overly familiar TV show.
25 San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
Just dreadful enough to want to shoot yourself and end up in the tender loving arms of the people at "Private Practice."
10 Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
I could make more fun of Life, but it probably wouldn't be too good for my karma.

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