Ratings Upon airing, the episode was watched by 1.380 million viewers with an 18-49 rating of 0.7.
Critical reception "Two Boats and a Helicopter" was acclaimed by critics, who praised the episode for its themes, heightened pace, and Eccleston's performance. On
Rotten Tomatoes, the episode has an approval rating of 92% based on 12 reviews, with an average score of 8.80/10. The critics' consensus reads, "Gripping and unpredictable, "Two Boats and a Helicopter" focuses on a single character for its duration, and the result is one of the series' best episodes to date." Matt Fowler of
IGN gave the episode a 10 out of 10, calling it a "stunning display of short-form storytelling." Fowler compared the episode to the flashback episodes of
Lost, Lindelof's previous series, for exploring the backstory of a single character, and praised Eccleston's "wonderful performance" for capturing the many shades of Matt's character. Sonia Saraiya of
The A.V. Club gave the episode an A, referring to the dream sequence as "masterfully done" and describing the episode overall as having "the unsettled, roiling mood of madness." Saraiya praised the overall episode as "nothing except an exploration of what it means to be inexplicably—indelibly—human. James Poniewozik of
Time noted that the episode convinced him to keep watching the rest of the season, also comparing the episode to the flashbacks in
Lost, but noting, "
The Leftovers is distinctively its own thing: its characters are torn not between faith and science but between purpose and despair."
Alan Sepinwall of
Uproxx praised the episode as a "bizarre, marvelous, freaky, abrupt left turn" for the series, highlighting its portrayal of "cosmic forces" affecting the series' world and characters, as well as Eccleston's "knockout performance." Saraiya pointed to the likely significance of Matt having missed his payment by three days (partly owing to an injury that rendered him unconscious), given that the
resurrection of Jesus occurred over the same time period. Sepinwall felt that the religious parable providing the episode its namesake was reflected in Matt's series of misfortunes, stating, "Matt, like the man in the parable from the title, either puts too much misguided faith in God, or simply doesn't read the signals correctly." ==References==