What we get is a tweaked variation on the litany of men-disguised-as-women comedies: "Some Like It Hot" and "Tootsie," just for starters. Obviously, this sassy farce sounds recycled and certainly appears to be in the coming attraction. Yet it's also funnier than expected in ways you wouldn't expect.Read Full Review »
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LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Thomas
Even if it lingers a bit too long, White Chicks represents a solid accomplishment for the crowd-pleasing Wayans brothers.Read Full Review »
The first family of black comedy goes at this bawdy burlesque with a broad brush. They get their laughs, but not without a lot of unsightly spillage.Read Full Review »
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ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
A tawdry excuse for a movie, but it has a handful of shameless giggles.Read Full Review »
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Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
The film feels long when it should be brisk, and it's bloated with stretches of hot, dead air. The racial kitsch goes nowhere.Read Full Review »
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Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
But it's not what the Wayans brothers do, it's how they do it. They do it funny.Read Full Review »
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CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Here is a film so dreary and conventional that it took an act of the will to keep me in the theater.Read Full Review »
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The New York Times: Dave Kehr
Credibility, of course, wouldn't matter if the gags were good enough, which they are not. The film quickly falls back on the gross-out jokes that have made recent American comedies such a challenge to the digestive tract.Read Full Review »