That cameraderie is bound to appeal to women looking for a howlingly trashy time.Read Full Review »
70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: John Anderson
The trick is getting from a conclusion made five minutes into a movie to an ending 90 minutes away. It can be a scary prospect. In The Sweetest Thing it is mostly a hoot.Read Full Review »
63
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
This movie is to sweet as a dog is to a hydrant. But it's little things like that that keep someone like Diaz laughing all the way to the urinal.Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
The movie is neither good nor bad, but in its clever packaging of boy fantasy and girl fantasy, extremely cunning. As for Princess Diaz, no force on Earth can stop her now.Read Full Review »
58
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
A movie in which laughter and self-exploitation merge into jolly soft-porn ''empowerment.''Read Full Review »
50
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Aspires to be a cinematic "Sex and the City," but it's more like South Park Goes West.Read Full Review »
50
Time: Richard Corliss
Randy and giggly, this is a femme version of "The Man Show."Read Full Review »
38
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
Has some promise as a throw-away, lighthearted romance. Unfortunately, once those elements are gone, what's left only has a running time of about 13 minutes.Read Full Review »
38
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
The ads for The Sweetest Thing promise that if you loved "There's Something About Mary" and "My Best Friend's Wedding," then you can't miss this latest Cameron Diaz vehicle. Well, miss it.Read Full Review »
38
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
It knows the words but not the music; while the Farrelly brothers got away with murder, The Sweetest Thing commits suicide.Read Full Review »