Starts out as a somewhat weary farce of infidelity, but turns into something a lot more gratifying, namely a comedy of mercy.Read Full Review »
60
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
What it does offer, however, are the pleasures of watching its seasoned stars expertly go through their familiar paces.Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Michael O'Sullivan
Where Town and Country gets really good and weird – and I do mean good – is only after about an hour into it in deepest, darkest Idaho.Read Full Review »
60
Salon.com: Andrew O'Hehir
It may be a haphazard mess, but it's actually pretty funny.Read Full Review »
50
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
The humor here is overcooked to the point of limpness.Read Full Review »
25
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
Just coarse, clunky, jerry rigged, and -- worst of all -- not funny.Read Full Review »
20
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
The plot feels arbitrary and seems driven to invent new places for its protagonists to go, as if to justify a budget on which Woody Allen could have made six much better films.Read Full Review »
20
Village Voice: Dennis Lim
Limps into theaters at long last, practically begging, with every arthritic pratfall, to be put out of its misery.Read Full Review »
10
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Seems merely tired and stale, the opposite of fresh, marked by ideas for jokes rather than things that are actually funny. Then, without warning, it goes from inept to complete disaster, sinking from indifferent to fiasco in the blink of an eye.Read Full Review »