Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
Susan Stark, Detroit News: Read more
Tom Maurstad, Dallas Morning News: What's really disgusting about this movie is how easy, cheap and lazy the shocks it delivers are. Read more
Robert Philpot, Fort Worth Star-Telegram/DFW.com: Doesn't resonate the way a good slob-comedy should. Read more
A.O. Scott, New York Times: Less about the dangers and pleasures of the unchained id than the giddy anarchy of the unbound imagination. Read more
John Zebrowski, Seattle Times: Heinous, tiresome, does things with large mammals that are just plain wrong and includes some of the funniest scenes in memory. Read more
Geoff Pevere, Toronto Star: [A] cynical creative and emotional vacuum of a movie. Read more
Bruce Westbrook, Houston Chronicle: Doesn't push the limits of taste so much as the limits of how bad a movie can be. Read more
Paul Clinton (CNN.com), CNN.com: This train wreck disguised as a movie is a case study of an annoyingly vibrant attack of arrested adolescent development. Read more
Steven Rosen, Denver Post: A movie so unrelentingly gross, disgusting and imbecilic that one mourns for the state of humanity while watching it. Read more
Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly: You may end up wanting to take a shower. That is, if you're still awake. Read more
Cody Clark, Mr. Showbiz: Too often, scenes crop up that have nothing to do with anything beyond Green's consuming need to be as outrageous as he can be. Read more
James Berardinelli, ReelViews: I have gotten better entertainment value from a colonoscopy. Read more
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times: A vomitorium consisting of 93 minutes of Tom Green doing things that a geek in a carnival sideshow would turn down. Read more
Stephanie Zacharek, Salon.com: Green just comes off as one of those weird, fey guys who's a lot less interesting than he thinks he is. Read more
Wesley Morris, San Francisco Chronicle: Tragically awful. Read more
Susan Wloszczyna, USA Today: Nothing onscreen is abused quite so savagely as the audience itself. Read more
Jessica Winter, Village Voice: The deranged momentum of guerrilla chaos that propelled the series is gone. Read more
Desson Thomson, Washington Post: In a sense, this is a horror film, worse than anything Andy Kaufman could dream up, in which Green tries to outgross himself. Read more
Stephen Hunter, Washington Post: If ever a movie testified to the utter creative bankruptcy of the Hollywood film industry, it is the abomination known as Freddy Got Fingered. Read more