SummaryRecently paroled, Mike Ferro (Boyd Holbrook) is accused in a subway bombing and LAPD's Counter Terrorism Bureau Detective Clay Bryce (Kiefer Sutherland) is determined to capture Mike in this reboot of the classic series.
SummaryRecently paroled, Mike Ferro (Boyd Holbrook) is accused in a subway bombing and LAPD's Counter Terrorism Bureau Detective Clay Bryce (Kiefer Sutherland) is determined to capture Mike in this reboot of the classic series.
[Holbrook and Sutherland are] both engaging enough, able to jump into the intensity in ways that some of the other Quibi shows fail to do. However, “The Fugitive” ultimately feels like the kind of thing that might have worked on the ABC Fall schedule better than it does here, where it reminds one a bit too much of Andrew Davis’s excellent 1993 film … only cut into pieces.
The Fugitive is typical for what Quibi has given its (very few) viewers so far: A project that’s not well-thought out, especially for the streamer’s 7-10 minute episode format. Oh, and it’s bad too.
Quibi has filleted the franchise into tasteless morsels of contemporary crap. ... These early chapters are talky the way a lot of bad '90s action movies were talky. There is chest-thumping machismo, snarky exposition, and no shortage of goofy exclamations.