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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
In Treatment
Season Two
EMAILPRINTSERIES: HBO, Monday/Tuesday 9:00p (30 minutes)

Universal acclaim
Based on 17 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 18 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Drama
Created By: Hagai Levi
First Air Date: April 5, 2009
Summary
Starring Gabriel Byrne, Dianne Wiest, John Mahoney, Hope Davis, Alison Pill, Aaron Shaw, Sherri Saum, and Russell Hornsby
Season two finds Dr. Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne) moved into a new office in Brooklyn after his divorce and with a new batch of patients: a panic-attack-plagued CEO (John Mahoney), a former patient (Hope Davis), a student (Alison Pill) hiding her illness from her family, and an 11-year-old boy (Aaron Shaw) caught between his divorcing parents (Sherri Saum and Russell Hornsby).
Episode Guide & More Info: More about this show at TV.com
Also On The Web: Official Show Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
NewsdayVerne Gay
Byrne is brilliant and--for the most part--so is this fine and absorbing show.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-TimesTeresa Budasi
Everyone has to bring their A-game and, for the most part, they do.
Read Full Review >SalonHeather Havrilesky
The acting on this show is so incredible that it's hard to remember that there's any acting going on at all.
Read Full Review >Wall Street JournalDorothy Rabinowitz
Its vivid, cliché-free writing has always been In Treatment's singular strength. That's even truer in its riveting new season--no small accomplishment.
Read Full Review >Boston GlobeMatthew Gilbert
This season as much as last, In Treatment brings us into more intimacy with its characters than almost any other series on TV.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles TimesMary McNamara
It is, to put it bluntly, a cast to die for. Each story line is well-drawn and compelling and each subtly represents a thread of Paul's own issues that come together in Gina's office even more effectively, if a bit more sentimentally, than they did last season.
Read Full Review >New York PostKyle Smith
Though relying heavily on a formula, the writing of In Treatment could not be tighter or purer.
Read Full Review >Chicago TribuneMaureen Ryan
It’s difficult not to follow Weston and his new array of patients this season, especially when the compelling Byrne shares the screen with seasoned actors such as John Mahoney, who plays Walter, an arrogant CEO suffering from insomnia, and Hope Davis, who plays Mia, a brittle Manhattan attorney who blames Weston, who treated her when she was in her 20s, for the problems that plague her two decades later.
Read Full Review >Kansas City StarAaron Barnhart
The one-person-shows these recurring characters put on each week are what give In Treatment its vitality, and of course it helps that HBO can draw from top stage talent.
Read Full Review >Newark Star-LedgerAlan Sepinwall
It is slow, and it requires work and careful observation, but when it achieves its breakthroughs, the effects can be as extraordinary and dynamic as any other drama on television.
Read Full Review >The New York TimesAlessandra Stanley
In many ways the second season is richer. The stories are again lifted from “Be’ Tipul,” but set in New York, the epicenter of post-Freudian civilization and its discontents.
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
There are still moments when the writers' Geppetto-like manipulation is too apparent, but the revelations that pile on week to week help smooth over those excesses--as does the simple pleasure of watching the intellectual tennis match as Byrne goes toe-to-toe with Paul's resistant, each-damaged-in-their-own-way clientele.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Daily NewsEllen Gray
The patients, too, are easier to take. With no one in sight that Paul's likely to get mushy over--the way he did so disastrously with Laura (Melissa George) last season--we're free to admire Mahoney's artistry as a CEO with panic attacks or to root for young Oliver, whose parents need therapy more than he does.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
It's still not a show for everyone, since 99% of the action is conversation. But it's intelligent conversation, and the problems of the patients, including Weston, are multilayered and compelling.
Read Full Review >PopMattersCynthia Fuchs
Paul’s sessions this time around are sometimes soapy--as they were last year--but they are always mesmerizing.
Read Full Review >San Francisco ChronicleTim Goodman
It's a strong cast, and Byrne and Wiest continue to deliver incredibly mannered and minutely shaded performances.
Read Full Review >TimeJames Poniewozik
Like a successful patient, the show has learned and grown, becoming more reliably compelling.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 9.3 (out of 10) based on 18 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
June H gave it a10:
The best acting I have ever seen on Tv. Gabriel Byrne is simpley the best.
Ann Cool gave it a10:
Terrific show. Wonderful acting - especially by Byrne.
kala p gave it a10:
I'm just addicted to this show. Byrne is just amazing ! (and the rest of the casting) The concept of the show is simple and powerful. The writing is wonderful. Lot of emotion, tragic and funny at the same. I would like to see the based original tv show betiful. Just to get an idea of how it was done back then.
Joan gave it a10:
What a fabulous show! I liked it last season; however, if possible, this season is even stronger. The first-rate cast and intelligent writing totally pull you in...probably the best show on TV.
Heather S. gave it a10:
I love this show! The writing and acting are first rate. When my choices seem to be limited to reality shows or incomplete attempts I turn to this show. Thank you!
chris c gave it a4:
Great subject matter, but the writing is incredibly poor. i thought the first season was awful but figured i'd give round 2 a shot. i made it through about 20 mins. of the first episode.
Miranda R gave it a10:
Love this show. I didn't like so much last year, but the first 2 eps are fantastic. hope rest of season lives up.
