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Arrested Development
Season 4
TV-MA
79%
74%
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The dysfunctional Bluths embark on separate journeys -- but always find a way back into each other's lives.
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Where to Watch Arrested Development • Season 4
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Arrested Development • Season 4 Ratings & Reviews
Los Angeles Times
Robert Lloyd
The experience was more akin to being drawn on through a good book, allowing yourself just one more chapter after just one more chapter until you look up from the page and it's morning.
IndieWire
Alison Willmore
The new episodes are sometimes brilliantly complex and include some wonderful gags... But they're undeniably low on heart and sometimes just cruel.
Den of Geek
Alec Bojalad
Yes, it's different. Yes, it's probably the least effective of the show's four seasons. It's also awesome.
CinemaBlend
Kelly West
I found Arrested Development's new season to be a refreshing revival of a classic comedy, as well as an impressive bit of storytelling, which makes good use of its ensemble cast, but does fall short in bringing that cast together.
Chicago Reader
Gwynedd Stuart
The idea itself is fine-an oblivious dad taking online courses from University of Phoenix and reliving a mock college experience alongside his son-but it felt tedious. And out of character.
Washington Post
Dan Zak
There is much more to like and dislike. Yes, Season 4 gets tangled in its own contrivances. Yes, it is fatty and over-narrated...But its zaniness is exuberant, its complexity awesome, its modality ineluctable.
Philadelphia Inquirer
David Hiltbrand
When all the plots began to coalesce, round about Episode 5, the comedy magic was back in the bottle.
Common Sense Media
Marjorie Kase
The plotlines are incredibly bizarre, unique, and hilarious. The acting is superb, and the direction allows for subtlety that isn't possible in a standard three-camera sitcom.
The New Republic
Laura Bennett
Hurwitz's bid to make a new kind of comedy for the Netflix age is disappointing because it confuses darkness with depth and convolution with complexity. As with those rows of empty chairs at Lucille's trial, it is hard not to see what is missing.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Matt Zoller Seitz
The way it navigates between self-awareness and sentimentality is often dazzling.
Slant Magazine
Nick McCarthy
There's still a plethora of fresh homonym-friendly wordplay, surprising parallels, and witty allusions to delight and preoccupy us until the series pulls off its next magic trick.
Entertainment Weekly
Melissa Maerz
This isn't just another season of the show - it's a heartfelt tribute to seasons past.
HitFix
Alan Sepinwall
The great delight of the series was the way Hurwitz, Jim Vallely and the other writers would run jokes out over multiple episodes, or even seasons, sprinkling in just a bit at a time as a reward for viewers paying careful attention.
TIME Magazine
James Poniewozik
If you marathoned old AD before watching this, turning on the first episode feels like stepping from a briskly air-conditioned room into a rainforest; everything's heavy, languid, a little oppressive.
Salon.com
Willa Paskin
This season may be even less perfect, but let not the fantasy of what it could have been be the enemy of what it is.
AV Club
Emily St. James
Though this fourth season is rough in places, it's also unquestionably an important and ground-breaking piece of TV.
HitFix
Daniel Fienberg
If you don't expect full unity and you don't expect the stealthy-yet-effective soul that always lurked behind the show's dark, dark heart, these 15 episodes deliver many laughs.
San Francisco Chronicle
David Wiegand
It proves that there is still hope for sitcom genius from the TV industry.
New York Times
Mike Hale
Everything feels slowed down and dragged out at the same time that it feels forced and overly complicated.
Variety
Brian Lowry
After the warmth of seeing them reunited, there's a sort of awkwardness to it, as if nobody really has much to say.
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