Justified’s love of the wacky short-story character … has made it funnier and less self-serious than other superficially similar antihero sho...
There’s a definite sense that the show is consciously returning to its core strengths.
Slant Magazine January 13, 2015 One of the great things about this noir-western hybrid is its interest in updating more than just the superficial tropes of those genres.
Justified is again fun and scary and thrilling – in some ways more, because both the show and the people on it know how little time they have...
Although the program isn’t as showy or heralded as the network’s other dramas, its sixth-season start reinforces a sense that Just...
Justified called it quits and went out with a finale that was as unpredictable and poetic and entertaining and memorable as the series itself. What...
With "Fate," as usual, the best stuff with Justified is often the little stuff: a stray word of dialogue, an Olyphant glance from under the shadow...
Huffington Post January 20, 2015 The greatest compliment I can pay Justified is to say that, despite the fact that it arrived at the height of the anti-hero boom, it never fel...
Orlando Sentinel January 20, 2015 Elmore Leonard loved this series based on his novella "Fire in the Hole," and Justified does him proud to the end.
A smart show knows when to quit, and sometimes after making the decision to quit, it finds itself again.
Globe and Mail January 27, 2015 It is emphatically a show to relish.
Somehow, over six seasons, the show’s producers have retained the style and attitude of their source material to craft a smart, engaging...