Metacritic TV

Damages

SERIES: FX, Tuesday 10:00p (60 minutes)

Starring Glenn Close, Tate Donovan, Rose Byrne, Ted Danson, Zeljko Ivanek, and Noah Bean

Created by Daniel Zelman, Glenn Kessler, and Todd A. Kessler

Genre(s): Drama

FIRST AIR DATE: July 24, 2007

Overall Metascore

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

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Detroit Free Press Mike Duffy
Damages is dynamite. And the fuse is lit.
100 New York Daily News David Hinckley
The law-firm arena is one of TV's oldest and most familiar genres, but Damages enlivens it by defying expectations.
100 San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
It's Close who makes "Damages" a series to contend with.
90 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
It demands commitment and a willingness to pay attention to the smallest bits of information, but it's also riveting. Once you decide to go take this case, you won't want to turn back.
88 USA Today Robert Bianco
Damages is an enjoyably complex thriller.
88 San Jose Mercury News Charlie McCollum
It's a mesmerizing tale of legal maneuvering with the distinctive FX moral ambiguity and splendid performances by Close, Rose Byrne ("28 Weeks Later") as her protege and TV veteran Ted Danson as her latest courtroom adversary.
80 Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
An impressively constructed thriller and an intriguing, timely exploration of what people at the apex of society will do to hold on to their power.
80 Miami Herald Glenn Garvin
It's the lack of moral clarity that makes Damages so spellbinding. Every character wears multiple masks; every action is cloaked in ambiguity and, often, outright duplicity.
80 Orlando Sentinel Hal Boedeker
A legal thriller with the depth and structure of an engrossing novel.
80 TV Guide Matt Roush
Who's a villain and who's a hero here? Can you tell the pawns from the players? All excellent questions as we become absorbed in FX's latest thrill ride.
80 Wall Street Journal Nancy DeWolf Smith
Despite its fantastic nature, the story is an onion with a thousand layers, each one a satisfying mystery of its own.
80 Washington Post Tom Shales
Nearly everything is done right, most conspicuously in the casting of Glenn Close as Patty Hewes.
80 Newsday Diane Werts
Richness of detail permeates this modern tube-noir. The more damage done, the more juicy fun for us to savor.
80 Los Angeles Times Mary McNamara
Close's performance illuminates rather than outshines with its high wattage.
80 Philadelphia Daily News Ellen Gray
As taut and twisted a mystery as anything you'll find on television this summer.
80 PopMatters Cynthia Fuchs
Interactions are rendered in smart, layered compositions, with elements that crowd and obscure, colors that distract and focus your attention. Such plot intricacies might appear contrived, but twisting even in the first episode suggests otherwise.
80 Philadelphia Inquirer Jonathan Storm
A challenging and satisfying legal thriller.
80 LA Weekly Robert Abele
Close’s burnished enigma characterization works beautifully because Damages, which will spend its 13-episode season detailing the six months that led to the opening shots of a blood-covered Ellen escaping a murder scene, is more a well-oiled genre exercise than the stuff of rigorous personality study.
75 New York Post Linda Stasi
Problem is that Episode 1 is so out there and over-wrought that you might not make the trip back for Episode 2. That would be a mistake. Week two is when it gets riveting.
70 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
This New York legal drama doesn't have the living, breathing dimensionality and character depth of FX's finest, including "Rescue Me" and "The Shield," on which Close guest starred in 2005. But it's a tense fun ride like the better John Grisham movies.
70 Variety Brian Lowry
The producers have assembled a solid cast and deftly employ flashbacks to ratchet up suspense.
70 The New Yorker Nancy Franklin
The plot is difficult to follow - shot sequences, at least in the first two episodes, often pair sex and death (an FX trademark, practically; it’s the network that looks our animal selves in the eye), whether or not their pairing helps the story--but you’re strung along deftly enough so that you do want to know how it’s all going to play out.
60 Newark Star-Ledger Alan Sepinwall
Damages offers two superb performances by old pros Glenn Close and Ted Danson.... One thing it doesn't have: a compelling main character. It's a doughnut show: lots of sweet, satisfying goodness around the edges, nothing in the middle.
50 Chicago Sun-Times Doug Elfman
The direction is capable. And there are moments of shining in the script, though there aren't yet enough fine scenes.
42 Entertainment Weekly Gillian Flynn
Patty's suppose to be a manipulative liar, but that's too much to believe. Like pretty much everything about this show. [03 Aug 2007, p.61]
40 Salon Heather Havrilesky
Even as we're prompted to be horrified by Hewes, her unrepentant nastiness, when paired with her immense power, leaves us very little to hope for here.
30 Slate Troy Patterson
By far the dumber and hammier of the two shows ["Saving Grace" is the other].

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