
Critic Reviews
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43
Metascore
Mixed or Average
positive
3(19%)
mixed
8(50%)
negative
5(31%)
Showing 16 Critic Reviews
Mar 10, 2016
75
A good portrait of a fallen man and the place he has fallen into. Promising--but also frustrating.
Mar 11, 2016
75
Flaked is to be commended for really capturing its setting, shooting very clearly on location and focusing on the issues facing this community right now.
Mar 10, 2016
70
If you’re willing to go along with the show’s carefully conceived aimlessness, it has the pull of a book of inter-connected short stories.
Mar 9, 2016
58
When the plot finally kicks in in the back half of the season, the unexpected shift in tone is intended to show how Chip’s apparently pointless life is the result of outside forces, but the series of twists (one clumsily telegraphed, the other a bit less so) don’t so much fill out the character as underscore how thin he was in the first place.
Mar 7, 2016
50
Flaked has the stylings of a TV comedy--meandering and lazily plotted, it doesn't work as drama--yet actual humor is all too absent.... This is disappointing, because what Arnett and Flaked do well, they do better than they ought.
Mar 7, 2016
50
Flaked is another horrid post-Togetherness drama-com that's too cute to be serious and too lame to be funny. [11 Mar 2016, p.78]
Mar 9, 2016
50
The series gets more substantive and quicker starting in Episode 6, but over all the pieces--man-boys on the prowl, bromance, occasional forays into seriousness--fit together uncomfortably.
Mar 11, 2016
50
Quality-wise, Flaked slots right in the middle of the pack. It is not as original, lacerating, or self-aware as Louie and Girls, the progenitors of this trend, or as good as Transparent, the perfector of it, but it contains a deep and precise character sketch.... Flaked is irritating exactly to the extent that it takes Chip’s plight too seriously.
Mar 9, 2016
40
Flaked offers up weak jokes and even weaker drama, as later episodes pile on contrived, overwrought plot twists.
Mar 10, 2016
40
By episode six, Flaked throws a real curve that’s nearly worth seeing through to the end, as Arnett’s performance deepens and the show becomes something more than just an excuse to loaf. The problem is getting there.