The series received mixed reviews, with some British critics feeling that it was too soon for such a drama.
The Independent said: "here comes the show that precisely nobody was asking for". The
New York Times said it "debuted with solid ratings" and said, "It adds up to a heartbreaking depiction of the pressure on health workers, and the fear, pain and often lonely deaths of those hooked up to ventilators".
The Times praised the series and called it "An impressive enterprise but not an easy watch".
The Irish Times said "If you can stomach the material, this show is hugely watchable". Branagh was praised for his performance,
The Guardian and
New Statesman felt the series was overly sympathethic to Johnson, as well as sanitised and detached from the front line experience. The
NME praised the series, but said that the format "takes some getting used to" as it oscillates between harrowing scenes in hospitals to events that resemble the 2005 BBC political satire
The Thick of It. ==See also==