Metacritic TV

Bones

SERIES: Fox, Tuesday 8:00p (60 minutes)

Starring Emily Deschanel, and David Boreanaz

Created by Hart Hanson

Genre(s): Crime, Drama

FIRST AIR DATE: September 13, 2005

Overall Metascore

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

55 / 100

Critic Reviews

88 Chicago Sun-Times Doug Elfman
Boreanaz and Deschanel stir good chemistry as a crime-fighting duo.
88 USA Today Robert Bianco
Bones isn't the riskiest or most ambitious series coming your way this season. But it may turn out to be one of the most satisfying and entertaining.
80 TV Guide Matt Roush
You might think you can't possibly fit one more crime-solving procedural onto an overcrowded calendar, but consider giving Bones a break.
80 Miami Herald Glenn Garvin
The show's witty, inventive writing would be fun even in the hands of a less capable cast.
75 People Weekly Tom Gliatto
Emily Deschanel is well cast as Brennan--she has the right sort of drained, remote presence, as if still working off last night's sleeping pill--and she's also well cast against David Boreanaz. [19 Sep 2005, p.45]
75 Detroit Free Press Mike Duffy
Besides the nifty, repressed romantic dynamic between Brennan and Booth, "Bones" has some fun with snazzy hologram visualizations of the murder victims in each case.
75 Houston Chronicle Mike McDaniel
Like CSI and its offshoots, Bones will take viewers to dark and sometimes disgusting places. So, in one sense, Fox may have come up with a format that will reach both men, who love unappetizing scenes, and women, because of the female heroine.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
Deschanel, who's believable either serious or perplexed -- and adorable in her quirkiness -- immediately becomes this series' most important ingredient.
70 New York Magazine John Leonard
As science and as detection, Bones has a way to go before it’s more than a bug in Grissom’s Vegas eye. But the screwball romance is promising.
70 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
An engaging crime show that borrows plenty from the ''CSI" franchise but adds a layer of light character drama.
70 Hollywood Reporter Ray Richmond
While "Bones" has too much "X-Files" and "CSI" going in the pilot to feel completely original, it's nonetheless a taut, well-constructed, character-rich procedural with genuine potential.
67 Entertainment Weekly Gillian Flynn
If Bones holds up, it'll be because that old Sam-and-Diane, Maddie-and-David, Mulder-and-Scully opposites-attract stuff never feels standard when it's done right.
63 New York Post Adam Buckman
In tonight's premiere of "Bones," for example, super-sleuth Temperance concludes from the young victim's bones that she was probably a tennis player -- a nifty conclusion, but one that has no bearing on the case. It's a factoid that leads nowhere, which is kind of where "Bones" goes in its premiere episode.
60 Orlando Sentinel Hal Boedeker
Deschanel exudes a luminous quality that elevates this grim, conventional show.
60 Cleveland Plain Dealer Mark Dawidziak
There's a fine line between clever and labored, and "Bones" sometimes strays over that line with one-liners about skull fragments, blood samples, X-rays and microbes. That's where "see how cleverly we can banter" writing creeps into the otherwise crisp proceedings.
60 Los Angeles Times Paul Brownfield
Rather too slick for its own good.
50 New York Daily News David Hinckley
The quality of the mystery in the pilot, no better than mediocre, is what keeps this series from starting off with a wider lead at the opening gun.
50 Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
It could use a little more dramatic meat on its predictable framework.
50 The New York Times Alessandra Stanley
Clings to proven formulas.
50 The Onion A.V. Club 
Boreanaz and Deschanel have nice chemistry... but the script also tends to undermine its brighter moments with dialogue that repeats the exposition and the characters' defining traits over and over again.
40 Variety Brian Lowry
Deschanel comes off a little too much like a sorority girl rather than a scientist with missing-parent issues.
40 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
"Bones" probably will remind more viewers of a cross between "CSI" and "The X-Files," except with more humorous banter than the first, and more romantic heat than the latter.
40 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
It's an (occasionally) frothy mix -- comedic moments tumble into serious scenes of forensic examination -- that's not altogether terrible, but neither does it beg to be watched on a regular basis.
40 Chicago Tribune Sid Smith
The scientific setup may be intriguing... But the dialogue, including the contrived sexual tension between Temperance and Seeley, is strictly canned and cutesy.
20 Kansas City Star Aaron Barnhart
A flimsy little procedural that uses logical and technological leaps of faith to hide its central problem: lack of co-star chemistry.
20 PopMatters Roger Holland
Bones is a very poor cross between the X-Files and CSI with characters stolen from NCIS, plot devices from Veronica Mars, and topicality from Law & Order.
20 Slate Dana Stevens
Memo to network execs planning an all-forensics programming slate for fall: Watching attractive people poke at skull fragments is not inherently interesting.
20 Washington Post Tom Shales
The heroine, unlikely in every detail including her name, Temperance Brennan, goes about reassembling corpses and then divining how they got to be that way. It's precise, tedious work and so is watching this show.
10 Newsday Verne Gay
It's as if we've all passed this way (many times) before and could write the dialogue, act the scenes, predict the outcome all in our sleep.

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