202 reviews
Elsbeth has come back. We are delighted.
For those who are not acquainted with her, it is a come-back indeed, as she is (to my knowledge) the only secondary character who has outlived not just one show (as Saul, of Better Call Saul), but two different long and successful series (The Good Wife and The Good Wife) and who has won people's heart to the extent of deservingly having her own show now.
Reencountering her in The Good Fight was a lovely surprise years ago, I remember. Meeting her again in this show promises to be truly exciting. The first episode was a pleasure, although the action seems to have a more comedic vein here than in those other productions. (Carrie Preston can do comedic passes while doing crime investigation indeed, and the hybrid works.)
The winks to fans of The Good Wife/Fight were there too. Will we meet Cary Agos here again? Oh, that could be great!
Elsbeth's kooky and loony attitude to lawyering now seems to be transferred to police internal surveillance. Don't be fooled by Elsbeth. Her brain is razor sharp, behind her apologetic, oddball and candid habit of annoyingly intruding into the work of the smart-asses who know it all. You can imagine the rest.
It may be the case that Michelle and Robert King will make it again with this new show, much to our enjoyment. I hope so.
Edit: After watching almost the whole first season, my initial impression has lost some enthusiasm. The comedic tone works in a contradictory way. I liked the "former" Elsbeth more, in a more serious environment, as the seriousness of the legal battles highlighted and added value to her oddity much more than this half-comedy, half-procedural spirit. It is watchable, though.
For those who are not acquainted with her, it is a come-back indeed, as she is (to my knowledge) the only secondary character who has outlived not just one show (as Saul, of Better Call Saul), but two different long and successful series (The Good Wife and The Good Wife) and who has won people's heart to the extent of deservingly having her own show now.
Reencountering her in The Good Fight was a lovely surprise years ago, I remember. Meeting her again in this show promises to be truly exciting. The first episode was a pleasure, although the action seems to have a more comedic vein here than in those other productions. (Carrie Preston can do comedic passes while doing crime investigation indeed, and the hybrid works.)
The winks to fans of The Good Wife/Fight were there too. Will we meet Cary Agos here again? Oh, that could be great!
Elsbeth's kooky and loony attitude to lawyering now seems to be transferred to police internal surveillance. Don't be fooled by Elsbeth. Her brain is razor sharp, behind her apologetic, oddball and candid habit of annoyingly intruding into the work of the smart-asses who know it all. You can imagine the rest.
It may be the case that Michelle and Robert King will make it again with this new show, much to our enjoyment. I hope so.
Edit: After watching almost the whole first season, my initial impression has lost some enthusiasm. The comedic tone works in a contradictory way. I liked the "former" Elsbeth more, in a more serious environment, as the seriousness of the legal battles highlighted and added value to her oddity much more than this half-comedy, half-procedural spirit. It is watchable, though.
- maria-ricci-1983
- Mar 1, 2024
- Permalink
First season was great with good plots for the mysteries and enjoyable acting. Second season onwards it feels like lot of plot holes are left in every mystery. Characters have a standard format and each episode just change their gender, occupation or lifestyle. Each murder arc going in the same linear direction for second season.
The acting by main lead is good but can't run the show only on that. Need a bit improvement on writing and direction. Also, the background plot for main season is lacking in 2nd season, which was shown in a good way throughout the season 1.
The first season is good and wonderfully organised for murder mystery fans!!
The acting by main lead is good but can't run the show only on that. Need a bit improvement on writing and direction. Also, the background plot for main season is lacking in 2nd season, which was shown in a good way throughout the season 1.
The first season is good and wonderfully organised for murder mystery fans!!
This show is fun,it's columbo 2.0 but with a goofier columbo. Like columbo,she immediately knew who did it in episode number one. I love the humor and goofiness of Arlene. Lol (sorry,couldn't resist) the show is refreshing and reminds me of the greats in my day. Columbo,McCloud,Hart to Hart,McMillion and Wife and so forth. Only 1/2 way through first episode and definitely hooked. I hope the writing holds up,it gets an audience and runs for a long time. It's really rare we get a show the last few years that's not trying to push some agenda on me. I will definitely be watching every episode. Give it a try.
I loved this character from the first time on The Good Wife and then when she moved on to The Good Fight I was thrilled. I am so pleased that "Elsbeth" now has her own show. Notice several reviewers complained that it was just "Columbo" and no police work was shown. That is because it is NOT a "cop show", she is an attorney. Carrie said in an interview that when presented with playing the character 14 years ago a "Columbo type" character is exactly how it was described to her, so obviously the Kings have done a wonderful job with the character and the show.
Carrie Preston is wonderful. Evertytime I see her my day is better. I hope this show is given a true chance to succeed because it can. I hate we have to wait a month to be able to see it on a weekly basis but I will be watching for sure. EXCELLENT.
Carrie Preston is wonderful. Evertytime I see her my day is better. I hope this show is given a true chance to succeed because it can. I hate we have to wait a month to be able to see it on a weekly basis but I will be watching for sure. EXCELLENT.
- jholland-34496
- Mar 1, 2024
- Permalink
Many people here have quite rightly pointed out that the format of this show is Columbo. That's fine. I have no problem with that. I loved Columbo and I loved the Elsbeth character in The Good Wife and Good Fight. The only issue here is the length of the episodes. Columbo episodes were an hour and a quarter to an hour and a half long. This gave the rumpled detective loads of time to play cat and mouse with the murderer. Elsbeth episodes are a feeble 45 minutes, so it often feels like everything is getting wrapped up before Elsbeth has even taken her coat off and sat down. Maybe some longer episodes for the second season please.
- martinjwolfenden
- Aug 26, 2024
- Permalink
- danmustapha
- May 22, 2025
- Permalink
Robert & Michelle King are the talented writing duo responsible for some of the best network TV shows in recent years, including "The Good Wife" and "Evil." After ending "The Good Fight," 2024 brings us yet another such spinoff of "The Good Wife," one named for that show's kooky lawyer character named "Elsbeth." The Leap Day pilot episode sets up the show's clever premise: that her title character has been designated an impartial observer of the NYPD in a formal legal consent decree to hopefully ferret out any police corruption in the ranks. But in the meantime she cannot help but help those hapless officers solve their trickiest cases. Like Columbo's classic show, we are privy to the perpetrator's machinations, but get pleasure from observing the observer, Elsbeth, investigate and determine those guilty of the crime(s). Carrie Preston is outstanding in the lead role, and Wendell Pierce excels in the role of the NY Police Captain, who may or may not be on the straight and narrow himself. I'll revisit my rating of 8/10 stars as we proceed.
If you loved Elsbeth on The Good Wife or The Good Fight, you'll really love her here, on her own show. I was thrilled when this show was announced and it did not disappoint.
The Kings have done a masterful job of continuing Elsbeth's quirky character. The show most definitely has a Columbo feel to it, as the who-dunnit part is revealed to the viewer early in the show. As always with the Kings, the writing is fantatic!
And let's talk about Carrie Preston. She is just spectacular as Elsbeth. She has now played this character for over 14 years over three different shows and I can't but smile every single time she's on the screen. Ten stars from me!
The Kings have done a masterful job of continuing Elsbeth's quirky character. The show most definitely has a Columbo feel to it, as the who-dunnit part is revealed to the viewer early in the show. As always with the Kings, the writing is fantatic!
And let's talk about Carrie Preston. She is just spectacular as Elsbeth. She has now played this character for over 14 years over three different shows and I can't but smile every single time she's on the screen. Ten stars from me!
- kellykat-38549
- Feb 29, 2024
- Permalink
- wolfee-24893
- Nov 17, 2024
- Permalink
- RememberingWhen
- Mar 1, 2024
- Permalink
I WANTED to love Elsbeth, I loved her in The Good Wife/Fight and loved Carrie Preston in everything from True Blood to Claws and this show wastes her talent and sullies her character. The writing/plotlines are so unbelievable, they're insulting. As an attorney, Elsbeth would gather little snippets of info and file away things that people said and look at things several different ways. As a second-rate Columbo, she meets the killer and apparently just gets a feeling that they are the killer and it's so clumsily done, it makes me miss a 50 year old show like Columbo. Do better guys...Carrie Preston, Wendell Pierce and Elsbeth deserve it!
Emmy winner Carrie Preston stars in her own series about the Chicago attorney moving to New York City and serve as outside observer. I think the Kings wanted to explore the character in a different light than a courtroom. The episode begins with the actual crime. The audience knows the murderer and why before she does. Unlike Columbo, we don't get enough time as the episode is only a hour long. I love Carrie Preston though. Her character of Elsbeth is quite quirky and entertaining. She does grown on you, She had a history of defending criminals. It was only the first episode. Elsbeth was taking in the city as a first time tourist.
- Sylviastel
- Feb 29, 2024
- Permalink
It's getting old fast. The cast is great, but it feels like a 6th grader is writing the show. They need to learn a little more about police procedures. Elsbeth seems to know what everyone is thinking without even asking questions. The writers should at least be required to watch a few episodes of dateline before attempting any more of these lame scripts. (And those purses are getting old too. She has three...yet can never seem to find a pen and paper.)
Note to director: detectives would NEVER let 15 police officers just mill around a crime scene! It would make it too easy to contaminate the evidence. Your viewers are not that stupid!!!
Note to director: detectives would NEVER let 15 police officers just mill around a crime scene! It would make it too easy to contaminate the evidence. Your viewers are not that stupid!!!
- jodie-33425
- Mar 14, 2025
- Permalink
We were all pleasantly surprised by the fresh take on the Columbo (1971) "reverse mystery" formula with Poker Face (2023), and here we have CBS's attempt at that sub-genre with mixed feelings.
For those unaware, the "reverse mystery" is not a "whodunnit" but a "howcatchem." In this format, the crime is depicted first in full view of the audience. There is no doubt "who did it." The fun them comes when the detective comes in and finds all the "little" things the killer gets wrong, and we get to watch as the "perfect crime" slowly unravels. Peter Falk as Columbo did this to great affect - with his little questions, constant "one more thing" jibes, and the reveal - that point where the killer know's the game is up - is more often than not very satisfying. Not so much here.
Now introduce Elsbeth Tascioni ( Carrie Preston ) who is well-known to those who follow the The Good Wife (2009) franchise. She's a quirky somewhat "neruodiverse" lawyer who has a special point of view of the world, and has a talent for seeing the little things.
Now Elsbeth is "on loan" to monitor the NYPD, and manages to ease her way into leading an investigation into a murdered actress. I have no love of New York or the NYPD, but I do take exception with law enforcement being depicted as out-right incompetent. There's a perfect crime scene, where the killer has covered all the bases to make the murder appear a suicide. Open and shut - where's the donuts. Only Elsbeth comes in and finds three or four completely obvious clues that suggest that the suicide might be murder. Of course, the cops are all bothered and unimpressed by her insights. "Wait in the hall," she's repeatedly told. But she's having none of it, and continues to poke-and-prod and even does a "one more thing" bit.
While I'm overall happy with this show - shot beautifully to make you believe that every day is sunny in New York (it's not) - the writing is extremely weak and it shows. No spoilers here, but - come on - the mystery is so shallow that it almost seems the killer didn't have to work so hard. The "little things" that Elsbeth notices are so obvious and in plain sight, a trained police detective would have to be completely incompetent not to notice them.
This show is almost-but-not-quite family friendly. The violence is subdued, and the killer goes (in classic Columbo fashion) with calm and grace, even asking "where did I slip up?" So, no fist fights, no car chases, no shouting matches. Only disdain for Elsbeth to go "wait in the hall."
I have overall hopes for this show that it will improve. This installment was weaker than the weakest of Columbo episodes. Here's hoping the mysteries can get deeper and the "howcatchem" can be satisfying again.
For those unaware, the "reverse mystery" is not a "whodunnit" but a "howcatchem." In this format, the crime is depicted first in full view of the audience. There is no doubt "who did it." The fun them comes when the detective comes in and finds all the "little" things the killer gets wrong, and we get to watch as the "perfect crime" slowly unravels. Peter Falk as Columbo did this to great affect - with his little questions, constant "one more thing" jibes, and the reveal - that point where the killer know's the game is up - is more often than not very satisfying. Not so much here.
Now introduce Elsbeth Tascioni ( Carrie Preston ) who is well-known to those who follow the The Good Wife (2009) franchise. She's a quirky somewhat "neruodiverse" lawyer who has a special point of view of the world, and has a talent for seeing the little things.
Now Elsbeth is "on loan" to monitor the NYPD, and manages to ease her way into leading an investigation into a murdered actress. I have no love of New York or the NYPD, but I do take exception with law enforcement being depicted as out-right incompetent. There's a perfect crime scene, where the killer has covered all the bases to make the murder appear a suicide. Open and shut - where's the donuts. Only Elsbeth comes in and finds three or four completely obvious clues that suggest that the suicide might be murder. Of course, the cops are all bothered and unimpressed by her insights. "Wait in the hall," she's repeatedly told. But she's having none of it, and continues to poke-and-prod and even does a "one more thing" bit.
While I'm overall happy with this show - shot beautifully to make you believe that every day is sunny in New York (it's not) - the writing is extremely weak and it shows. No spoilers here, but - come on - the mystery is so shallow that it almost seems the killer didn't have to work so hard. The "little things" that Elsbeth notices are so obvious and in plain sight, a trained police detective would have to be completely incompetent not to notice them.
This show is almost-but-not-quite family friendly. The violence is subdued, and the killer goes (in classic Columbo fashion) with calm and grace, even asking "where did I slip up?" So, no fist fights, no car chases, no shouting matches. Only disdain for Elsbeth to go "wait in the hall."
I have overall hopes for this show that it will improve. This installment was weaker than the weakest of Columbo episodes. Here's hoping the mysteries can get deeper and the "howcatchem" can be satisfying again.
Elsbeth (Carrie Preston) is so infectious. Her character's zest for life and people makes me want to smile, stand up and cheer. Cannot wait to see how the show progresses. Also love that Arlene and Bill (True Blood) were back together for episode one. The chemistry between the characters was top notch for the first episode. All of them acted perfectly together. No over acting or lull in the scenes (for me). And of course, it does not hurt that the show is created by The Kings, who are simple amazing with mixing drama, comedy, and crime all together. Hopefully, this show will last a while. Entertaining.
- mrintimate
- Feb 29, 2024
- Permalink
Absolutely a 10/10 for the first episode!
No time was wasted; the pacing was superb. I was captivated throughout the entire hour, and it just breezed by.
The writing is exceptionally clever and humorous, ensuring a constant smile. Surprisingly, a character that might be perceived as annoying is actually comes off quite charming.
The only critique is the portrayal of police competence or engagement. However, one could argue that this mirrors real-life situations, considering what we know about the police... and their gross mishandling of things.
Additionally, it's reminiscent of Sherlock Holmes, who consistently highlights the police's incompetence in noticing small details.
No time was wasted; the pacing was superb. I was captivated throughout the entire hour, and it just breezed by.
The writing is exceptionally clever and humorous, ensuring a constant smile. Surprisingly, a character that might be perceived as annoying is actually comes off quite charming.
The only critique is the portrayal of police competence or engagement. However, one could argue that this mirrors real-life situations, considering what we know about the police... and their gross mishandling of things.
Additionally, it's reminiscent of Sherlock Holmes, who consistently highlights the police's incompetence in noticing small details.
- konstantinbg-00598
- Feb 29, 2024
- Permalink
I was hesitant about this show; because Elsbeth, in my mind wasn't a main character. A little of her goes a long way, I thought. I was wrong.
Carrie Preston was just the right mix of zany with the ability to pull back a bit and let the story take center stage. I thought she and the show were excellent.
The supporting actors were seamless and it felt like they all were in a mid-season groove even with the first episode
I enjoyed every minute of the premiere. I love the mix of comedy and drama. I was involved in the crime part of it but laughed a few times, too.
Well-written, entertaining, with a bit of a bounce. I can't wait to see the next episode.
Carrie Preston was just the right mix of zany with the ability to pull back a bit and let the story take center stage. I thought she and the show were excellent.
The supporting actors were seamless and it felt like they all were in a mid-season groove even with the first episode
I enjoyed every minute of the premiere. I love the mix of comedy and drama. I was involved in the crime part of it but laughed a few times, too.
Well-written, entertaining, with a bit of a bounce. I can't wait to see the next episode.
Wife and I watched the first episode and immediately fell in love with Elsbeth. While she reminds us of Columbo, she is her own person and we love it. She is quirky and devilish. She has kind of a gleam in her eyes that lets you know there is a lot going on behind them. She is witty, funny and possesses the wonder of a child and the disposition of someone I would like as a friend in real life. You learn from the beginning she has seen a lot but does not appear to let it darken her view of the world around her. So far the cast of characters come off as reasonable and for TV surprisingly realistic. We are patiently waiting for the next episode and hope the show continues to shine.
- derrick-dj
- Mar 1, 2024
- Permalink
I've watched Columbo and he definitely wears down the bad guy, I see some of that "spark" with this series but ...The overall crimes are interesting, the storytelling I hope will improve. I watched about 6 episodes. Carrie /Elsbeth toned down the quirk in latter episodes TY. I do not appreciate the derogatory "boomer" references and it turns me off; nope not a boomer, but show some respect because writers who came before, can write circles around those today. Officer Blanke is actually my fav character, she seems the most authentic, realistic of all: young but smart and observant, open-minded, respectfully defiant and helpful. The actress is capturing that. I will give the show a few more episodes before deciding.
Definitely a female Colombo but uniquely done. I loved every moment of it.
This is a crime procedural so always ends with the crime solved. You know who the murderer is and you just watch Elsbeth put together the clues, and solve the crime. Elsbeth is quirky and charming, and just like Colombo she gets in the face of the murderer, constantly bothering and irritating them as she gathers the clues.
The supporting cast is great. Puts a smile on your face. I like that this show is light and doesn't take itself seriously. While there's always a murder to solve, there's comedy as well. Great show!
This is a crime procedural so always ends with the crime solved. You know who the murderer is and you just watch Elsbeth put together the clues, and solve the crime. Elsbeth is quirky and charming, and just like Colombo she gets in the face of the murderer, constantly bothering and irritating them as she gathers the clues.
The supporting cast is great. Puts a smile on your face. I like that this show is light and doesn't take itself seriously. While there's always a murder to solve, there's comedy as well. Great show!
- marc-w-cassidy
- Mar 2, 2024
- Permalink
I want to love Elsbeth, because I love Elsbeth herself, but the supporting cast just doesn't bring it. They are good in other things, and I like them, but the writers made them too much the dry foil to Elsbeth's quirky character. They need more powerhouses like Christine Baranski or Juliana Marguelies to offset the silliness of Elsbeth's character. I also wish they didn't reveal the murderer at the very beginning of the show. It would be more fun to watch her work it out and guess with her, than to know all along. I love the New York setting though. I think this could be a great show, if they got the supporting characters right.
- suzannejguy
- Feb 20, 2025
- Permalink
Elsbeth is a female version of Columbo with a silly, naïve, but brilliant ability to look at the crazy world of New York City through the naturally happy eyes of a midwestern small-town person's point of view. I know, that's a lot of adjectives to describe the endearing character of Elsbeth, but it all fits together and it works.
She's absolutely adorable.
While the "big guy" smart cops of NYC are going through their paces trying to figure out "who done it," before they've even finish putting up all the police tape, Elsbeth has already figured it out. Now the trick is getting the murderer backed into a corner leaving him or her no way out but to confess. If Elsbeth can't get a confession out of them, she will find a clue those so-called smart NYC cops missed, and that previously overlooked clue will nail the suspect, and close the case.
There's a few back stories as well that give the other characters in the series substance and help us like them.
I love Elsbeth and hope the series continues for a very long time.
She's absolutely adorable.
While the "big guy" smart cops of NYC are going through their paces trying to figure out "who done it," before they've even finish putting up all the police tape, Elsbeth has already figured it out. Now the trick is getting the murderer backed into a corner leaving him or her no way out but to confess. If Elsbeth can't get a confession out of them, she will find a clue those so-called smart NYC cops missed, and that previously overlooked clue will nail the suspect, and close the case.
There's a few back stories as well that give the other characters in the series substance and help us like them.
I love Elsbeth and hope the series continues for a very long time.
- missylinda51
- Aug 31, 2024
- Permalink
This is supposed to be the NYPD/Police version of Ted Lasso, but the writing is lazy. It is usually exactly who you think it is, usually the way you think it is. As a New Yorker, I was surprised to find that cameras mostly do not exist. Several "cases" would be solved by looking at the camera that would normally exist in reality. Elsbeth's partner starts the show wearing a uniform from 27 Precint; then, by episode 2, she is wearing a uniform from the 11th Precint but reporting to work at the 27th Precint with Elsbeth. If you believed the show, a short circuit in one (luxury) apartment would take down the electricity in the whole building. The 27th Precinct has jurisdiction over the entire city of New York. Expect these, and many more errors of how NYC works, in this show. I want to like it ,but I keep seeing the glaring errors, knowing they should know better. It is like the show is being written by someone in a foreign land who has only seen a cartoon of NYC, and does not know how reality works. This would work better as a cartoon.
- dudeman456
- Mar 8, 2025
- Permalink
The parralels with Columbo are too much to ignore, especially since Columbo did it better. The plots of each episode are largely trite and predictable. Most of the characters are forgettable, and there's no way the captain or the departent would allow a civilian to overreach like she has when it comes to solving or throwing in her 2 cents on cases.
The show is a waste of the Elsbeth character, as she would be better suited to making each episode a whodunnit, where the viewer and she can both try to figure out the culprit before the final reveal.
I certainly hope the show improves if renewed. The last episode I watched was a yawnfest..
The show is a waste of the Elsbeth character, as she would be better suited to making each episode a whodunnit, where the viewer and she can both try to figure out the culprit before the final reveal.
I certainly hope the show improves if renewed. The last episode I watched was a yawnfest..
- ddirby-95110
- Nov 15, 2024
- Permalink