| 100 |
Newsday Verne Gay
Anyone who enters this fantastic and beautifully realized play-scape--which remains ever so slightly ghoulish--will stick around. This is a winner. |
| 100 |
San Francisco Chronicle Tim Goodman
Again, it's back to the writing and the look. Both are superb. |
| 100 |
USA Today Robert Bianco
Heavily narrated and prone at times to the precious, Daisies is a show unlike any other, and not everyone will like it. But even those who don't can embrace it as a sign that creativity, confidence and capability have not fled broadcast for cable just yet. Here, they're alive and thriving. |
| 100 |
TV Guide Matt Roush
Easily the best and most original entertainment too few are watching, Daisies dazzles and delights with a sensory overload of perfectly surreal whimsy that juggles screwball fairy tale, romantic comedy and mystery. |
| 83 |
Time James Poniewozik
Daisies has a timeless, picture-book look. It could be set today, in the '30s, in the '70s or in any other decade fond of saturated color. Like Chuck herself, it's a perfect candidate for a second chance: as glowing and lovable as the day we first met it. |
| 80 |
Variety Brian Lowry
The facts, then, are these: Pushing Daisies isn’t perfect, but there’s no other dance on TV remotely like it. And to echo last season’s review, that alone is reason to hope it finds a way to avoid death’s touch. |
| 80 |
Philadelphia Daily News Ellen Gray
If you managed to miss all nine episodes of last season's best new show, worry not. The first three minutes or so should catch you up nicely. |
| 80 |
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
This first episode back sets a lot of goals for itself: Remind viewers of the backstory, advance the plot from the cliffhanger, and introduce and resolve the murder-of-the-week. Daisies succeeds in accomplishing these tasks and even finds time for a "Sound of Music" shout-out as Olive pulls a Maria von Trapp en route to a nunnery. |
| 80 |
Hollywood Reporter Barry Garron
Pace and Anna Friel, who plays Chuck, his childhood sweetheart, are as charming as ever. Even better, their relationship is evolving. Yet another encouraging sign is that the first few episodes promise significant involvement from one of TV's best supporting casts. |
| 80 |
Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
You may well be wondering if they are worth watching – perhaps for the first time. In the case of Pushing Daisies, the answer is a qualified yes. |
| 80 |
Newark Star-Ledger Alan Sepinwall
A show this whimsical needs a few anchors to avoid floating away altogether. Emerson is one, and the hands-off Ned and Chuck romance is the other. |
| 75 |
Entertainment Weekly Ken Tucker
The pie puns continue to make me wince--Olive says she’s ''really flaky,'' while Lily accuses her of being ''all pious.'' And Chi McBride's cynical detective still feels oddly disconnected from the rest of the ensemble. But the show has a fresh, vigorous snap, and the impeccably deadpan Pace gets off some good lines. |
| 70 |
Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
I admire this show--it's so original, and sequences such as the "Sound of Music" goof are right on. But I admire it more than I enjoy it. |
| 60 |
New York Daily News David Hinckley
It still has the same problem, which is exactly where it can take itself, but the ride remains as delightful as the bright shiny colors with which the show lavishly decorates itself. |