In ABC’s Missing, a former CIA agent named Rebecca Winstone (Ashley Judd) travels to Europe in search of her son Michael (Nick Eversman) who’s disappeared while on a summer internship in Italy.
She’ll use any means necessary to get her son back but will enough viewers want to follow along? Will the show be cancelled before she can find her boy?
Here’s what some critics are saying about Missing:
NY Daily News: “Rome isn’t conquered in a day, even by Becca, and watching Missing will require a commitment, not occasional whim. As drama it has a few holes and clearly a lot of backstory that will unspool at its own pace. Some of the action scenes, in keeping with special-effects tradition, are filmed in near-darkness. But the narrative is crisp, fast and easy to follow, and in the end the real issue is pretty simple: Do we like Becca Winstone enough to follow her every week down a long and bloody winding road?”
Boston Herald: “The mix of soccer mom and expert operative can turn funny: Becca interrupts her own interrogation of Michael’s girlfriend to scold her about smoking. Judd, who serves as series co-executive producer, makes for a surprisingly convincing action hero. It’s when she stops to emote in full mommy mode that the show drags. Missing might as well be about Becca’s identity crisis. ‘I am not CIA! I am a mother looking for her son,’ she protests. For this series’ sake, here’s hoping Becca finds her son soon and realizes her true calling is rescuing the rest of the world — or at least the eight o’clock hour.”
Washington Post: “Missing is certainly no 24, but like that show, it prefers action at points where it could really stand to slow down and build out a slightly more creative story. It’s the very definition of a guilty-pleasure series, which ABC is getting good at, but it’s also a reminder of how far we’ve fallen since the more complex Alias days. You know how some people can get their father a spy novel and a sweater every Christmas — and he’s always satisfied? This is just his kind of show.”
LA Times: “She can say, “I’m not a spy, I’m just a mother looking for her son” as often as she wants (and she does, with wearisome regularity), but since Judd makes it so difficult to engage with her character, Becca’s quest becomes less, rather than more, emotionally evocative. What viewers are left with, then, are some excellent fight and chase scenes, an outstanding supporting cast (who, alas, only highlight the main character’s deficiencies) and a lot of truly beautiful location work. It may be enough, but it could, and should, have been so much more.”
USA Today: “Judd is certainly a game action star. But like many Hollywood stars her age, male and female, a certain plasticity has seeped in that damages both the character and her abilities as an actor. Whether through natural or artificial means, her face often appears to be immobile. And beyond the distractions, which include wondering how it can be possible that Becca has fewer wrinkles than her son, it limits her performance range. The scenery is pretty, though, and it’s not supposed to move. You’ll have to decide if that’s enough.”
NY Times: “The fights and action sequences are good by TV standards, and there’s a bit of classic international thriller ambiance, courtesy of location filming in the Czech Republic and a few scenes that actually appear to have been shot in Rome and Paris. Mostly it has Ms. Judd, who, with a mightily clenched jaw and the help of some excellent stunt doubles, is surprisingly credible as a starched, middle-aged action figure battling unknown kidnappers, every intelligence agency in Europe, her former C.I.A. handlers and, most critically, her own maternal instincts, which alternately help and hinder her.”
Hollywood Reporter: “Eventually, Missing stops demanding that it be taken so seriously. Your eyes are in for a treat, and Judd grows on you. Some of the hokey plotting fades into the background after that… If you want an hour of escapism and entertainment each week — and why wouldn’t you? — credit ABC for making an hour disappear into thin air.”
Newsday: “Nice locales (Paris! Rome!), a couple of decent action sequences… but otherwise a tepid potboiler over-seasoned with too many spy tropes and a plot with too many gaping holes.”
What do you think? Does Missing sound like it’s worth watching? If you’ve seen it, will you tune in again?
Image courtesy ABC.
I am truly enjoying this show! I hope you renew it. It may not be perfect in every way as television shows go, but neither is anything else in this world. It provides an excellent escape each week, along with a much needed geography lesson on the sly. Please give the show a chance. It’s much better than the ridiculous “reality” shows that serve to degrade people and show the worst side of humanity.
LOVE The Show Can’t wait to the next week to watch it again.
Love the show, please keep it on! The music is fine! Ashley Judd is great as the super mom! It is a refreshing change from all the “reality shows” that bore me to death. It is time to escape back to when TV was a place to lose yourselves and forget about the daily grind.
Love the show- please keep it on- Ashley is at her best.
Not in a long time have I been so riveted by and looked forward to watching a television show every week! I can only watch it online because I have no cable. this works for me too because I can always watch it even if I have to work on the night its on. I love love Ashley Judd/Rebecca Winstone who beautifully portray’s a strong female character’s maternal instinct which can make me cry and kick ass spy skills which make me cheer. I love the show I hope ABC will support it through to its anticipated exciting end!!
LOVE THE SHOW PLEASE KEEP IT RUNNING!!!!
Enjoy this show however the music is too loud and you miss some of the diagog. Need to tone it down before we get tired of rewinding to here what is being said.
With each episode, this series becomes more difficult to continue to watch. How is Becca such a lean, mean fighting machine after 10+ years of arranging flowers? Why are all of her old contacts still found in the same locations? If the CIA wants her controlled, why don’t they just cancel her passport or put her on the no-fly list? The problem from the beginning was that she has been simultaneously an irrational, emotional, desperate mother who would chase an aircraft down the runway and an out of practice, but efficient and calculating, operative. The resolute line of her jaw… Read more »
I’m not much of a tv watcher anymore because I find most of the dramas predictable, overdone, jumping on each others ideas, etc. That’s what makes this show particularly different. It is unpredictable, tight acting and dialogue, good camerawork. Of course the scenery is fantastic. I was in Europe all last summer and it’s lovely reliving those streets. And then there’s Ashley. I find her very believable as both a mom and super-spy. She’s just using the talents she has to get her son back. A well trained spy is trained to be calculating and unemotional when dealing with situations.… Read more »
Love, love, love this new show. When this weeks episode ended I was shocked it was over! It didn’t seem possible we could have been watching it for an hour. I am very much hoping the network will allow the show to develop and stay the course. It’s a winner! Great casting too!
My husband and I love the show!
Love the show and so do many of my friends ans family. Leave it alone!!!! Keep the show and Ashley Judd here every week. Thanks.
I love the show.. Leave it alone!
Love this show. I hope it can hang on and get more people interested. It leaves you on the edge of your seat every week and makes you come back for more. Ashley Judd is phenomenal and it’s hard to believe this is a series and not a movie. Keep the episodes rolling and get your friends to start watching! Great show!
I really enjoy watching the show. I personally think this is one of the better dramas currently on TV and it’s nice seeing Ashley Judd acting again.