St. Louis Post-Dispatch by Gail Pennington
Superb characterizations and riveting action are leavened by wry humor, making Deutschland delightfully addictive.
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Set in the divided Germany of 1983, young East German soldier Martin Rauch is given a new assignment as an undercover spy for the West German Stasi. Navigating this new world as he comes of age, Rauch tries to gather NATO secrets when everyone is hiding something, personal or political.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch by Gail Pennington
Superb characterizations and riveting action are leavened by wry humor, making Deutschland delightfully addictive.
The A.V. Club by Genevieve Valentine
Deutschland 83 is a stylish take on the spy genre that carefully balances its humor with high stakes, and with Nay as an anchor, promises that this is a spy caper worth a few summer weeks.
Entertainment Weekly by Joe McGovern
The series is imbued with retro cool and, similar to the winking hindsight of Mad Men, takes pleasure in mixing a complicated past with a keen sense of pop. [19 Jun 2015, p.57]
Yahoo TV by Ken Tucker
The show manages to juggle suspense with light moments without spoiling either mood.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette by Rob Owen
The premiere episode of Deutschland 83 delivers an excellent mix of coming of age character drama and espionage derring-do. For viewers not allergic to subtitles, it's well worth watching.
Time by James Poniewozik
It’s serious and it can be stark, but it’s also funny and brisk, a coming-of-age story with a sense of adventure.
The New York Times by Neil Genzlinger
Beneath the light moments and the spy-versus-spy stuff, the series has a perspective that makes it refreshing.
New York Post by Elisabeth Vincentelli
What really makes this eight-episode series stand out is its setting, because a family divided is more impactful than strangers going at each other.
San Francisco Chronicle by David Wiegand
Nothing gets lost in translation in Deutschland 83, especially the timeless human drama.
Wall Street Journal by John Anderson
It’s certainly entertaining and well-done but, based on the first two chapters, the viewers are going to have to swallow quite a large helping of implausible sauerkraut to attain their suspension of disbelief.
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