Wild Hogs Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

36 =
Based upon 13 Critic Reviews
See all Wild Hogs reviews at
Sorted by:
The Hollywood Reporter | Frank ScheckAdd Critic to Favorites

With its clever premise and quartet of appealing comedic star turns, Wild Hogs is a step above the typical comedies rolling off the assembly lines of the major studios.Read the full review

Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie is this year's "RV," a rolling tent show of suburban male anxieties: castration, obsolescence, dismissive offspring, fears of gayness. LOTS of fears of gayness. Unlike "RV," though, Wild Hogs is funny. Eventually.Read the full review

Variety | Dennis HarveyAdd Critic to Favorites

Given his writer-producer credits on good-to-great recent sitcoms ("My Name Is Earl," "Arrested Development," "Grounded for Life"), one might expect more situational wit, or at least some snappy patter, from Brian Copeland's first bigscreen script. Instead, the humor rests primarily on slapstick wipeouts that have no physical consequence.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

Jokes dying on the lips of these easy riders are hard to stomach.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

Nothing about this sputtering midlife-crisis family comedy is natural except the timeless notion that even the most latte-tamed baby boomer has the power to reclaim his inner Iron John. Ray Liotta provides the one true blast of comedic energy as the leader of a real, more pugnacious head-butting gang who tangles with the four amigos.Read the full review

The New York Times | A.O. ScottAdd Critic to Favorites

Mr. Lawrence and Mr. Allen, who have never aspired very far beyond their affable television-comedy personas, are easier to watch than Mr. Travolta or Mr. Macy, who both undertake what can only be called acting. This is more than the picture deserves, but then again, so is Ray Liotta, as the chieftain of the bad bikers, and so is Ms. Tomei.Read the full review

Washington Post | Stephen HunterAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie never rises to the level of the professional, much less the comic. The gags are witless and surprisingly gross. The four actors, each accustomed to being at the center, never develop any rhythm, any chemistry, any anything.Read the full review

USA Today | Claudia PuigAdd Critic to Favorites

From the embarrassingly over-the-top performance of Ray Liotta as a tough-guy biker to the pratfalls of William H. Macy as a bumbling computer geek, this movie stinks of exhaust and desperation.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

Wild Hogs is more tired, worn out, and sagging than its protagonists - an arthritic comedy whose humor is below mediocre and whose drama is cringe-worthy.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Sam AdamsAdd Critic to Favorites

By the time it sputters across the finish line, Wild Hogs feels as if it's gone on forever -- like a trip in a hot car with the windows rolled up. The air is stale and hard to breathe, and it sure feels good when it's over.Read the full review

Track Your Favorite Critics | Start Now