The Gentlemen | Series | Telescope Film
The Gentlemen

The Gentlemen

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  • United Kingdom,
  • United States
  • 2024
  • · 1 season
  • · 60m

Creator Guy Ritchie
Cast Theo James, Kaya Scodelario, Daniel Ings, Joely Richardson, Vinnie Jones
Genre Comedy, Crime, Drama

When his old man croaks, U.N. peacekeeper Eddie Horniman inherits the title of Duke of Halstead, a lavish country estate, and a massive weed farm hidden under the property run by unscrupulous gangsters. Suddenly embroiled in the dangerous world of drug trafficking, Eddie works to navigate it with the goal of giving the gangsters the boot.

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What are critics saying?

90

Variety by Aramide Tinubu

From the picturesque settings and costuming to the use of written on-screen text that helps the audience keep varied deals, people and schemes outlined, the show unfolds like a dazzling web of turmoil, keeping viewers sucked in over its eight episodes. Entertaining — with hijinks, plots and gory violence — “The Gentlemen” irons out the kinks that plagued its film predecessor.

90

Collider by Nate Richard

The Gentlemen is the perfect example of improving an already perfectly good movie by expanding on it to tell a new, and even better, story. The Netflix series has all the things that fans of Ritchie could want but also feels accessible to those who aren’t quite familiar with the auteur. It’s bloody, foul-mouthed, fast-paced, and it doesn’t disappoint.

83

The A.V. Club by Saloni Gajjar

Some of the storytelling turns are either too convenient or too ridiculous. But that’s the beauty, people: Not everything needs to be prestige TV or a smart drama to get it right. Sometimes, it can just be pure distraction, and The Gentlemen is as successful a bit of escapism as they come.

80

The Times by Carol Midgley

The standout performances, though, by some measure, are from Ings and James. Yes, you may at times wish it would stop meandering and dial down the slapstick, and, indeed, that it was two episodes shorter. But the bottom line is that it is entertaining and it will make you laugh.

80

Decider by Johnny Loftus

Like most of Guy Ritchie’s material when he’s in caper and kooky criminals mode, The Gentlemen is a romp. Chippy, funny, stylish, cartoonishly violent, touched with mild absurdity.

80

Paste Magazine by Shane Ryan

In the moment of viewing, it overrides my instinct to want to criticize the puffery of it all, the flimsy foundation of pure adrenaline, the absence of the artistic impulse to say anything actually meaningful. I just opened a bottle of wine, hit play, and before I knew it, five immensely entertaining episodes had passed.

80

Wall Street Journal by John Anderson

The show does feel a bit bloated at times, self-indulgent in trademark Ritchie fashion. But the fact that the series comes across as a collection of short stories makes it far more palatable, and fun.

80

Radio Times by James Hibbs

For all those who enjoyed the film, even loved it, there were others who found it too violent, too glib, too high on its own supply. If that's you, then you'll want to stay away from this series. It's Guy Ritchie going full Guy Ritchie, perhaps the most Guy Ritchie he's ever gone before. If that sounds like a bit of you, though, then strap in - it's going to be a truly wild ride.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper

There are times when “The Gentlemen” wanders off into the woods and we get a little impatient waiting for the gears to grind again, but thanks in large part to the sharp writing and the stellar performances from Theo James and Kaya Scodelario and the entire ensemble, this is a worthy addition to the Guy Ritchie library of stylish and violent crime thrillers.

75

The Playlist by Rodrigo Pérez

Filled with style, panache, laughs, and a solid cast putting in the effort, it’s largely one of Ritchie’s best comedic efforts in a while and one that wryly suggests barons and burglars are often just different sides of the same coin, inherited, appropriated or otherwise.