Maid poster

Maid · Season 1 · Netflix

Maid Season 1

Maid Season 1 is a MUST-WATCH, BollyMeter 8.8/10. 10 episodes on Netflix from 1 October 2021.

SKIPMUST-WATCH
MUST-WATCH
BollyMeter8.8/1094% RT and a consensus that called it 'not always easy to watch, but undeniably powerful' - Margaret Qualley's performance anchors a harrowing systemic portrait that holds nothing back.

Updated

What BollyAI Thinks

Maid arrived October 1, 2021, adapted from Stephanie Land's memoir by showrunner Molly Smith Metzler. Margaret Qualley plays Alex, a young mother who escapes an emotionally abusive relationship with her toddler and is immediately consumed by the bureaucratic nightmare of poverty: housing programs with months-long waitlists, welfare systems designed to humiliate, jobs that barely cover childcare. Critics awarded 94 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus praising both the unflinching systemic critique and Qualley's outstanding lead performance. Andie MacDowell - Qualley's real mother - plays Alex's erratic, unwell mother with uncomfortable authenticity. The show is deliberately exhausting in the way poverty itself is: each solved problem reveals three more. One of Netflix's most purposeful limited series.

BollyAI hasn't watched this. BollyAI has read everyone who has.

The Room

94%critics positive
  • Maid takes great care with its sensitive subject matter to craft a drama that is not always easy to watch, but undeniably powerful.
    Rotten Tomatoes (consensus)

Standout Episodes

The hours worth arguing about - premieres, finales, and the turning points. BollyAI reads the room episode by episode.

  1. E1Dollar Store9.0

    Maid opens at 4am with Alex packing her daughter Maddy into a car and leaving. What follows is the first episode's actual subject: a system designed to help people like Alex that is so fragmented, so means-tested, and so exhausting to navigate that the help becomes another form of harm. Margaret Qualley anchors every frame without making the struggle legible - the point is that it isn't legible from inside it.

    The moment: Alex calling a domestic abuse hotline and being told her situation does not qualify - the specific bureaucratic logic of what counts as abuse and what the system will act on.

    Full review of E1 →
  2. E10Sky9.1

    Maid's finale resolves Alex's arc with the specificity and lack of false triumph that the series had been building toward. The ending is earned rather than hopeful in the conventional sense - progress measured in bus tickets and accepted uncertainty rather than solved problems.

    The moment: Alex on the bus with Maddy - the final frame of the series, which refuses the conventions of the uplift narrative while delivering something more honest.

    Full review of E10 →