Netflix drama Adolescence hailed as âflawlessâ TV

Viewers and critics have heaped praise on Netflixâs hard-hitting drama Adolescence, with many hailing it as a landmark TV show.
The four-part British series was released last week and is the most-watched show on the platform around the world over the weekend.
The Timesâ Tom Peck described it as âcomplete perfectionâ, a view echoed by the Guardianâs Lucy Mangan, who said it was âthe closest thing to TV perfection in decadesâ.
Fans on social media ranged from US director Paul Feig, who called the first episode âone of the best hours of television Iâve ever seenâ, to Jeremy Clarkson, who called it âmasterfulâ.

Adolescence shows the aftermath of the stabbing of a teenage girl, with a 13-year-old boy from her school arrested for her murder.
Jamie, the young suspect, is played by newcomer Owen Cooper, with Stephen Graham as his dad.
Its story shines a light on the corrosive impact of social media and misogynist influencers on some teenage boys.
Graham said he was inspired to make the show after seeing two separate reports of boys stabbing girls to death.
âI just thought, whatâs going on in society where this kind of thing is becoming a regular occurrence?â he told BBCâs The One Show.
âI just couldnât fathom it. So I wanted to really have a look and try and shine a light on this particular thing.â
Male rage
Writer Jack Thorne said they wanted to âlook in the eye of male rageâ.
The central character had been âindoctrinated by voicesâ like Andrew Tateâs and âvoices a lot more dangerous than Andrew Tateâsâ, Thorne told Radio 4âs Front Row.
Erin Doherty, who plays a child psychologist, told BBC Radio 4âs Today programme: âThis show has the bravery to just peel back the layers and go, letâs talk about this thing, because weâre still dealing with it today. There are still issues cropping up in the news today.
âSo all we can hold ourselves accountable for is having the discussion, and hopefully thatâs what it does. It just allows parents, aunties, uncles, even just friends, to engage in the conversation.â

Each episode was filmed in a single, uninterrupted take.
In the Guardian, Mangan said its technical accomplishments âare matched by an array of award-worthy performances and a script that manages to be intensely naturalistic and hugely evocative at the same timeâ.
She added: âAdolescence is a deeply moving, deeply harrowing experience.â
Peckâs review in the Times began: âWow. Just wow. Iâm tempted to type out the word âwowâ a further 700 times or so, followed by, âDonât miss Adolescence on Netflix,â and then be done with it.â
The Telegraphâs TV critic Anita Singh said it was âa devastating watchâ, adding: âIt is a drama so quietly devastating that I wonât forget it for a very long time.â
Singh said the single-shot technique âcan feel like a gimmickâ but that the acting is âphenomenalâ.
Graham is âthe best actor working todayâ, but âthe truly remarkable performanceâ is by Cooper, she wrote.
âHe moves between vulnerability, anger, bravado and fear. What he does here is astonishing.â
Fantastic performances
Elsewhere, Deadlineâs Jake Kanter wrote: âAdolescence is as flawless a four hours of TV drama I have ever seen. It lingers in the mind long after the credits have rolled. Astonishing telly.â
Rolling Stoneâs Alan Sepinwall said it was âamong the very best things â and an early contender for the best thing â you will see on the small screen this yearâ.
The New York Timesâ Margaret Lyons called it âa rich work of social critiqueâ, describing the standout episode, the third, as âone of the more fascinating hours of TV Iâve seen in a long timeâ.
On BBC Radio 5 Liveâs Must Watch, Hayley Campbell said the drama doesnât attempt to solve the problems it raises.
âItâs bringing it up, itâs looking at it. Itâs about the rise of misogyny, especially in young boys, brought about by people like Andrew Tate, whoâs namechecked in this, but only once. Itâs not about him.
âThe drama is more about the horror of how little control you have over your kid and what theyâre doing on their phone.â
Fellow critic Scott Bryan added: âThe performances are absolutely fantastic. I would say this is flawless. The person, though, I think who deserves the most recognition is 15-year-old Owen Cooper.â