Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
Robert Denerstein, Denver Rocky Mountain News: Read more
Sharon Pian Chan, Seattle Times: 28 Days tries too hard to be all things to all people. Read more
Susan Stark, Detroit News: Eminently likable Sandra Bullock has lately shown a bizarre knack for choosing hard-to-like movies. 28 Days continues her unenviable streak . Read more
Philip Wuntch, Dallas Morning News: Sandra Bullock gives her best performance yet in 28 Days. Read more
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times: 28 Days is too glib too often to make much of an impression any way you look at it. Read more
Louis B. Parks, Houston Chronicle: It's not bad, but it's not very good, either. Read more
Ted Anthony, Associated Press: The story and character arcs are pure Screenwriting 101, and every time something unexpected seems poised to happen, the script reaches out, grabs it and pulls it back in line. Read more
Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly: Bullock gives it her all; she's bristling and alive on screen in a way that she hasn't been since Speed. Read more
Stephen Holden, New York Times: Read more
James Berardinelli, ReelViews: 28 Days possesses all the depth and insight of a made-for-TV movie. Read more
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times: Bullock brings a kind of ground-level vulnerability to 28 Days that doesn't make her into a victim but simply into one more suitable case for treatment. Read more
Peter Stack, San Francisco Chronicle: 28 Days tries hard to be funny. Occasionally it is. But mostly it seems forced, pat and didactic. Read more
Dennis Lim, Village Voice: Thomas's fleet-footed approach suggests the anxious embarrassment of a director in an awful hurry to get it over with. Read more
Desson Thomson, Washington Post: 28 Days may be fluff, but it's good fluff: effortless, amusing and almost touching. Read more