| 83 |
Entertainment Weekly Gillian Flynn
Tell Me is an incisive drama, but it's not an easy commitment. |
| 80 |
San Jose Mercury News Charlie McCollum
By the end of the first hour of Tell Me, I found myself caring deeply about what was happening to the couples and whether, in the end, they would find some joy of sex and emotional satisfaction. And whether I care about the characters is always my bottom line as to whether a series succeeds. |
| 80 |
LA Weekly Robert Abele
Although it manages to be suspenseful about the journey of its jumbled characters, it is an unrelenting examination of the search for the hidden recipe of me, you and us that makes for a strong marriage, and that's something you ultimately have to steel yourself for in a weekly series. |
| 80 |
Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
[A] deeply interesting, occasionally riveting show. |
| 80 |
Hollywood Reporter Barry Garron
It's imperative to make [a commitment] to this series because it doesn't really find itself until the second and third episodes. That's when you feel and recognize the beauty and the pain that Cynthia Mort smartly and sensitively portrays in her fiercely honest examination of sex in relationships. |
| 80 |
Washington Post Tom Shales
Tell Me You Love Me is not only more provocative than any of the broadcast networks' new fall shows, but also more sophisticated--even than those shows that aspire to be "adult." |
| 80 |
TV Guide Matt Roush
Tell Me You Love Me is an engrossing, searing, sometimes squirm-inducing study of intimacy, told with a fly-on-the-bedroom-wall realism that is both clinical and wrenching. Voyeurism has rarely felt so unnerving yet ultimately rewarding. |
| 75 |
New York Daily News David Hinckley
The rest of the drama, though, suspends disbelief much more successfully. The acting, by both men and women, is quite nuanced and well-observed. After a few episodes, you feel their pain, and hope that it is eased. |
| 70 |
Newsday Diane Werts
It's daring, disconcerting and/or enlightening. |
| 70 |
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
Once you get past the sex and if you can endure the sadness of the stories, Tell Me begins to have an addictive quality. |
| 70 |
The New York Times Alessandra Stanley
The series is bold in its candor and unhurried attention to detail, but not quite brave enough to lay bare the bleakest, pettiest injuries that can scar a marriage. |
| 70 |
Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
In essence, you're watching the parts of life we're never supposed to see play out before our eyes, and the effect can be either uncomfortable but fascinating or whiny and dull. |
| 63 |
USA Today Robert Bianco
The stories and performances vary in interest, and all would benefit from a bit more humor. Still, even the weaker stories eventually pull you in, if only because you spend so much time listening to these people complain, you want to see how they work things out. |
| 63 |
Chicago Sun-Times Doug Elfman
The storylines are not so much entertainingly paced as they are merely interesting, representational or too often plodding. |
| 60 |
Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
The couples are ordinary, and so are their issues. That’s part of the goal of the show--to dissect the mundanity of love and anger. But making a developing story out of these tangles and skirmishes is extremely difficult, and Tell Me You Love Me doesn’t quite pull it off. |
| 60 |
Variety Brian Lowry
In short, if you come for the sex, you'll only stay for the characters, and those represent an intriguing but decidedly mixed bag. |
| 50 |
San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
Intriguing--but not especially enjoyable. |
| 50 |
PopMatters Cynthia Fuchs
Tell Me You Love Me begins within confines, its white, middle class, straight couples all dealing with versions of the same problem. That this focus might be "real" is not the question. More troubling, for a series banking on its newness, is that the focus is so familiar. |
| 40 |
Los Angeles Times Mary McNamara
Unfortunately, it is difficult to stay interested in what happens to any of these characters because most of them are so absurdly unlikable. |
| 30 |
Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
There's no intrigue, no entertainment, and the show's motion, when there is any, is so s-l-o-w, it's virtually undetectable. |
| 30 |
Slate Troy Patterson
Why didn't HBO just go ahead and cut each episode of the hour-long Tell Me You Love Me to 50 minutes? The trims would have gone some way toward relieving the boredom inspired by the show's inchworm pace, and the shrink's-hour format would have made an exact fit for the spirit of the exercise. |
| 25 |
Slant Magazine Len Sousa
It's not the realism that brings Tell Me You Love Me down, it's the long list of unlikeable characters. |
| 20 |
Wall Street Journal Amy Finnerty
Nonorganic dialogue quickly becomes boring for viewers. The directors seem to have lavished so much energy on the choreography of the sex scenes that they have nothing left for verbal expression. |
| 20 |
Salon Heather Havrilesky
Yes, [the sex is] all very realistic, but not very hot, thanks to the fact that these are grouchy, humorless people whom we'd rather see hitting each other in the head with two-by-fours. |
| 20 |
Detroit Free Press Mike Duffy
Tell Me You Love Me is little more than an intellectually pretentious, emotionally vapid snoozer. |