Two Weeks Notice Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

52 =
Based upon 13 Critic Reviews
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Washington Post | Ann HornadayAdd Critic to Favorites

Has the tired, over-baked feeling of a script that never quite worked but was tinkered with until every ounce of spontaneity or life was hammered out of it.Read the full review

Variety | David RooneyAdd Critic to Favorites

An affable but undernourished romantic comedy that fails to match the freshness of the actress-producer and writer's previous collaboration, "Miss Congeniality."Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

A movie that is relentlessly inoffensive and completely unoriginal –- two qualities that combine to make it only sporadically charming and rarely (if ever) compelling.Read the full review

Wall Street Journal | Joe MorgensternAdd Critic to Favorites

Manages to make its live actors sound -- and even sometimes look -- computer generated. This wan, sluggish comedy wouldn't pass muster as a premium-cable original, but here it is on the big screen.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kevin ThomasAdd Critic to Favorites

It is a lovely, amusing diversion from the start, but the depth of its poignancy by the time it's over comes as a surprise.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

Knows what it needs to do for both its stars, does it, and doesn't make a federal case about it. I'd watch these two together again in a New York minute.Read the full review

Washington Post | Michael O'SullivanAdd Critic to Favorites

A numbingly unfunny romantic comedy. I hated every minute of itRead the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Mick LaSalleAdd Critic to Favorites

Anyone who prefers Hugh Grant and Sandra Bullock to Ralph Fiennes and Jennifer Lopez is bound to regard Two Weeks Notice and not "Maid in Manhattan" as the better candidate for romantic comedy of the season.Read the full review

USA Today | Mike ClarkAdd Critic to Favorites

If anything, Grant seems to be getting funnier, and he now has the ability to elevate material the way another Grant -- Cary -- did.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

I WANTED it to be a typical romantic comedy starring those two lovable people, Sandra Bullock and Hugh Grant. And it was. And some of the dialogue has a real zing to it. There were wicked little one-liners that slipped in under the radar and nudged the audience in the ribs.Read the full review

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