Viewership Fox touted in a press release that it had an averaged 2.8/7
Nielsen share and 5.8 million viewers for the six episodes, and that it ranked sixth in teenage viewership against other television networks. The miniseries ranked #56 in the adults 18–49 ratings and #103 in the total viewership rankings for the 2011–12
television season.
Critical response Reviews for the premiere episode were mixed. Linda Stasi of the
New York Post praised its humor as almost as funny as the film, and Nancy Smith of
The Wall Street Journal called it "a dream come true" for fans of the film. Ed Bark of
UncleBarky.com enjoyed the series and said it was "far funnier" than the Fox animated comedies ''
Bob's Burgers and Allen Gregory. Simon Moore of Flickering Myth'' compared the series' "left-field laughs" favorably to the humor in
The Simpsons and
Futurama. On
Rotten Tomatoes,
Napoleon Dynamite has an aggregate score of 32% based on 9 positive and 19 negative critic reviews. The website's consensus reads: "Unfunny and hackneyed,
Napoleon Dynamite doesn't understand what made the movie popular in the first place." David Wiegand of the
San Francisco Chronicle found the writing not funny, writing that he could not see "Jon Heder's expressionless face" as he talked in the animation. The
Staten Island Advance said the change to animation freed
Napoleon from real-world limitations, but thought it "lessen[ed] the overall appeal of the character and setting". Lori Rackl of the
Chicago Sun-Times did not like the movie and liked the animated television series even less; she thought the emotions and physical humor were lost in the change to animation. Brian Lowry of
Variety gave the series a neutral review: "To say the show represents an improvement over
Allen Gregory is not much of an endorsement, but there is something amusing about Heder's monotonic voice and Napoleon's utter lack of self-awareness, along with fast-paced gags like a miniature golf course where hitting the ball into Hitler's mouth wins a free round." Robert Bianco of
USA Today called the first episode a "vulgarized premiere" that detracted from the film's qualities, but called the second one a "sweeter, funnier improvement". Mary McNamara of the
Los Angeles Times wrote of the pacing that the "satirical silence or non-sequitur scenes slowly compiled to establish tone" in the film, but were sacrificed for the faster pace of a network TV series. Simon Moore of
Flickering Myth disagreed the faster pace was to the series' detriment, calling the film's "snail-like pace ... its biggest flaw". ==References==