Mr. & Mrs. Smith · Season 1 · Prime Video
Mr. & Mrs. Smith Season 1
Mr. & Mrs. Smith Season 1 is a MUST-WATCH, BollyMeter 8.8/10. 8 episodes on Prime Video from 2 February 2024.
Updated
What BollyAI Thinks
Donald Glover and Francesca Sloane's reinvention dropped all 8 episodes on February 2, 2024 and immediately registered as one of the more distinctive genre experiments of the streaming era. Critics at Rotten Tomatoes (90%, 122 reviews) and Metacritic (76/100) converged on the same point: the show uses the spy-couple premise as a pressure chamber to observe how a relationship forms under professional duress. Glover and Maya Erskine play the chemistry with restraint rather than heat, a choice that reads as more unsettling and more interesting than a conventional romantic spy thriller. Hiro Murai's direction of the first two episodes sets a formal register - cool, precise, slightly uncanny - that the show sustains across its run. The finale polarised audiences but confirmed the show's willingness to follow its own logic wherever it leads.
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Standout Episodes
The hours worth arguing about - premieres, finales, and the turning points. BollyAI reads the room episode by episode.
- E1First Date7.9
A tense opener that swaps slick first-impression charm for awkward caregiving, long silences, and a mystery engine that prefers unease to payoff.
The moment: The couple's first awkward domestic scene after moving into their shared cover home - mundane and genuinely tense in equal measure.
Full review of E1 → - E2Episode 27.6
A contradiction-forward hour that uses long silences and secret tech to make denial feel dangerous, even when suspense stretches.
Full review of E2 → - E3Episode 37.4
A jittery, evidence-first episode that exposes competence as performance, then pays it off by making Brady’s sabotage feel like the real jeopardy.
Full review of E3 → - E4Double Date8.1
A theft mystery turns nastier once the episode realizes the real culprit may be convenience itself, not the face behind the note.
The moment: The dinner table conversation where professional and personal collapse into a single terrifying question.
Full review of E4 → - E5Episode 57.4
Episode 5 tightens tension into confrontations while using Bill’s credibility collapse as the real investigation plot.
Full review of E5 → - E6Episode 67.9
Episode 6 turns the promotion mission into background pressure while silence and sequencing weaponize Brady’s mother crisis.
Full review of E6 → - E7Episode 77.6
“Episode 7” turns a clean hack payoff into a deeper moral and personal question, with pacing that makes the doubt linger.
Full review of E7 → - E8A Breakup8.3
A tense, jagged hour that turns contradiction into character and leaves the mystery messier, sadder, and more dangerously personal.
The moment: The final confrontation, which refuses the genre catharsis viewers expected and delivers something stranger and harder.
Full review of E8 → - E9Episode 97.6
Episode 9 builds suspense from blocked evidence and a confession-led chase, then cashes it out with a protocol-tight SWAT breach.
Full review of E9 → - E10Episode 107.8
Brady’s “dead” disguise and the police split weaponize silence into dread, while the episode’s control reveal makes every threat feel inevitable.
Full review of E10 → - E11Episode 117.8
Episode 11 tightens a beauty-clinic conspiracy with theft and procedural pressure, but its speed sometimes blurs emotional weight.
Full review of E11 → - E12Episode 127.8
A relentless, dialogue-dense case file where money panic and concealed evidence make guilt feel structural, not incidental.
Full review of E12 →