Just Like Heaven (2005) Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

54 =
Based upon 12 Critic Reviews
See all Just Like Heaven (2005) reviews at
Sorted by:
Washington Post | Ann HornadayAdd Critic to Favorites

Outlandish, uneven, preposterous and often maddeningly morbid.Read the full review

Variety | Brian LowryAdd Critic to Favorites

As uneven as the topography of its San Francisco locales, but the amiable peaks mostly offset the flat stretches and valleys. A variation on a very old meet-cute theme with a touch of otherworldly romance.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

It's not heaven, exactly, but after the purgatory of the late summer movie season, it may be close enough.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie starts cheating the audience early, and never lets up.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kevin ThomasAdd Critic to Favorites

There are moments when it is possible, with effort, to forget the plot and its tired premise and enjoy Witherspoon and Ruffalo's chemistry and imagine they are in another movie. But never for long.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

That Just Like Heaven succeeds at all - at least for teenage girls with limited interest in the drafting of living wills - is due entirely to Witherspoon's can-do charisma.Read the full review

USA Today | Mike ClarkAdd Critic to Favorites

Garnering a chuckle or two, but no more, are Donal Logue from "The Tao of Steve" (now there's a comedy) -- and, as a desperate magnet for both the slacker and "dude" demographics, Jon Heder from Napoleon Dynamite.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

Yes. The movie works, and so we accept everything.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Ruthe SteinAdd Critic to Favorites

The last half is so superior to the first that you wish they'd rethought the whole thing and devised a way to make it more of a one piece.Read the full review

The Onion (A.V. Club) | Scott TobiasAdd Critic to Favorites

Part of the problem is Mark Ruffalo, whose tortured sensitivity in "You Can Count On Me" and "We Don't Live Here Anymore" made him seem like Marlon Brando's heir apparent, not Will Smith's.Read the full review

Track Your Favorite Critics | Start Now