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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
United States of Tara
EMAILPRINTSERIES: Showtime, Sunday 10:00p (30 minutes)

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 24 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 23 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Comedy
Created By: Diablo Cody
First Air Date: January 18, 2009
Summary
Starring Toni Collette, John Corbett, Rosemarie DeWitt, Keir Gilchrist, Brie Larson, and Patton Oswalt
Tara (Toni Collette) and her family try to cope with her dissociative identity disorder (formally called multiple personality).
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
It's smartly written; clinically interesting (Why is Tara this way?), and maybe even a metaphor for the challenges all women face.
Read Full Review >Kansas City StarAaron Barnhart
As a comedy, it’s surprisingly entertaining....But what ultimately kept me watching, through every screener Showtime provided, was this audacious bit of acting from Collette.
Read Full Review >Miami HeraldGlenn Garvin
It's a testament to the remarkable performance of Collette that it will never occur to viewers that Tara's behavior is anything but a mortal compulsion. Her remarkable moment-to-moment morphs from teeny-bopper slut to Stepford Wife to biker brute and then back again beggar the imagination.
Read Full Review >Hollywood ReporterRay Richmond
Anyone who makes it past the pilot is in for a pleasant surprise: Things greatly improve as the show settles into a comfortable rhythm through Episodes 2, 3 and 4. United States of Tara breaks new ground when it comes to warped dramatic family comedy.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Daily NewsEllen Gray
Cody's gift is for characters who do and say the unexpected while remaining real, but without Colette, it's easy to imagine Tara as a train wreck, or, worse, an acting exercise. Somehow she imbues Tara's alternate personalities--known as the "alters"--with enough substance to make them interesting, without making them so real that we forget they're a manifestation of an illness.
Read Full Review >SalonHeather Havrilesky
The high-caliber storytelling is what separates United States of Tara from just another kooky romp of a dramedy, teetering precariously on a superficial premise.
Read Full Review >Pittsburgh Post-GazetteRob Owen
As entertainment, United States of Tara succeeds through humor, vivid characters and a stunning performance by Collette, who disappears into the roles of Tara's alters.
Read Full Review >Washington PostTom Shales
Whatever it is, it's fascinating, the television equivalent of the book you can't put down and maybe the jigsaw puzzle you never quite complete.
Read Full Review >USA TodayRobert Bianco
The show is fun as is, but rise to Collette's level, and it could be great.
Read Full Review >San Francisco ChronicleTim Goodman
It's one of those series with overabundant potential and early hints of provocative brilliance, but it may take a while to truly arrive.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles TimesRobert Lloyd
While it's generally entertaining, there are times when it seems too obviously invented.
Read Full Review >New York MagazineEmily Nussbaum
United States of Tara, a flawed but fascinating series about a women with Dissociative Identity Disorder.
Read Full Review >The New YorkerNancy Franklin
The three alters are broad stereotypes, but Collette makes the moments of transition surprisingly touching, and sometimes subtly comic.
Read Full Review >Boston GlobeMatthew Gilbert
I'm on board with Tara, but so far mostly for the supporting characters, whose number expands in the coming weeks to include a self-empowered "Vita-self" saleswoman who is overly curious about Tara's disorder.
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
As the show progresses, the stronger moments indicate that Showtime has a more durable commodity here than just the sales pitch for "Sybil: The Series." That's in part because the producers have done an exceptional job of casting beyond the central roles.
Read Full Review >SlateTroy Patterson
Tara doesn't yet show the same emotional depth as Juno--not in its first four episodes, at least--but if you have the fortitude to make it through the tonal assault of its first 10 minutes, then you'll get to see some recognizable human feeling seep up through the wisecracks.
Read Full Review >The New York TimesAlessandra Stanley
Unfortunately for Ms. Collette, the roles of Tara’s children are so deftly written and skillfully played that they undermine her own star turn--Tara has four personalities and is one-dimensional in all of them.
Read Full Review >PopMattersKirsten Markson
While the portrayal of the disorder is gimmicky, the show sustains a particular charm, thanks to solid performances and its honest treatment of the complex relationships in this unconventional family.
Read Full Review >TimeJames Poniewozik
Tara has the potential to be a great comedy about identity, but it needs to be less self-conscious about its strangeness.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
United States of Tara, which features Toni Collette as the title character and whose executive producers include Steven Spielberg, takes a riskier tack, giving the story a wide vein of comedy. In many ways, they pull it off.
Read Full Review >Chicago TribuneMaureen Ryan
The brittle hipster lingo that almost all the characters spout at one time or another gives Tara a patina of cleverness, but it doesn’t add a thing to our understanding of the characters or their plights.
Read Full Review >LA WeeklyRobert Abele
United States of Tara plays like surface feminism with an added gloss of snark and a bewilderingly blah sentimentality.
Read Full Review >Wall Street JournalNancy DeWolf Smith
Perhaps Tara will, over time, find something interesting to say. Perhaps it will be about the trauma that presumably led to the split in Tara's personality. Right now, however, what makes the show so painful is the abuse of her children, inflicted by Tara both in and out of split mode, and abetted by her pathologically laid-back husband.
Read Full Review >New York PostLinda Stasi
The series from Academy Award-winning "Juno" screenwriter Diablo Cody and Steven Spielberg smacks of smugness and self-congratulatory cleverness.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 7.0 (out of 10) based on 23 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Shay S gave it a5:
Good idea, okay cast, bad scripts.
June Bug gave it a10:
the writing is genius. The maybe (ofcourse) gay son could have been great but I doubt any gay or bisexual can relate. It was a miss at a great possibility to deal with the mothers problems and the sons problems. But its still a show that will grow into a classic.
Juno macguff gave it a10:
Best show on showtime. Weeds comes second. The writing is genius. Nothing special about the directing even though urs coming from stev-o. Not the jackass. But um proud that he wanted diablo to work with him and make a show together. They have a future movie project together, I guess he was extremely impressed with the script for Juno, which was a brilliant movie. If you don't like the show just let grow on you. Its a great show.
Lynn D. gave it a10:
Toni Collette makes great use of this opportunity to show off her acting chops! Love this show.
Anne S gave it a9:
This is one of the finest shows on television. Please note, the only two negative reviews come from papers owned by Rupert Murdoch of Fox News fame, likely a corporate directive issued in reaction to the young gay character.
Susa S. gave it a1:
Apparently Showtime doesn't want to know the REAL facts about DID, and what a person who has DID struggles with on an hourly basis. I feel insulted to have received an obvious "form email letter" in response to my heartfelt email to Showtime. What I have seen in the episodes so far, is that Mr. Spielberg is using "sex, sex, and more sex", to sell a series. At least with the massive number of anti-Tara emails that Showtime obviously has received from DID sufferers, they have included an "informative" video from Dr. Kluft; however, even in his short documentary, he did not address the magnitude of the horrific childhood sexual abuse that causes Dissociative Identity Disorder. The so called "consultant" that the writer, Diablo Cody is conferring with, had DDNOS, not DID. Apples and oranges... sigh. Imagine for a moment, if you can: A new Showtime series called, "The Deformed State of Tara" - a COMEDY about a girl who confronts comedic situations in her every day life revolving around her dealing with her inability to climb stairs, her sexual encounters, and her comedic experiences with people staring at her scarred and deformed face and arms. (As a child, her parents had physically abused her so intensely, that her repeatedly broken bones resulted in a leg amputation, and the repeated burns the parents inflicted on her arms and face resulted in grotesque scarring which made her face appear as almost inhuman.) This scenario is NO DIFFERENT than creating a "COMEDY" about a person who suffers from a disorder caused by repeated, early childhood RAPE AND INCEST. One might say that the results of childhood physical abuse are apparent to outsiders, but the results of childhood sexual abuse resulting in Dissociative Identity Disorder are also readily apparent to others in public. Raping young children is NOT comedic. Does this life seem like a comedy?
warwick c. gave it a9:
A fine show...most critics who don't like this show seem to be falling into the trap of believing the show is a realisitic representation of did and not a dark comedy to highlight the issue
