Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
John C. Davenport, Dallas Morning News: The funniest scene in Tomcats is at the end of a series of outtakes shown during the closing credits. Should you sit through what precedes it just to reach this puny payoff? No. Read more
Dave Kehr, New York Times: The film is enthusiastically vulgar but not particularly funny, perhaps because it too often loses the distinction between gross-out humor and the merely gross. Read more
Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times: Raucously energetic and replete with a barrage of graphic sexual humor. Read more
Bruce Westbrook, Houston Chronicle: Of course, we expect such films to be tasteless. That's their job. But that doesn't forgive them for being more abusive than bawdy or more sleazy than kinky. Read more
Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly: In its mingling of horniness and disgust, Tomcats attains a convoluted cleverness. Read more
Jan Stuart, Newsday: Yet one more slice of American Pie-style outrageousness for and about guys with raging libidos and pinheads. Read more
James Berardinelli, ReelViews: Tomcats seems obsessed not by offering viewers a good time, but by trying to out-gross its predecessors. Read more
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times: A comedy positioned outside the normal range of human response. Read more
Carla Meyer, San Francisco Chronicle: Offers only tired jokes, grimace-worthy physical comedy and bad, bad acting. Read more
Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post: At times, it doesn't seem like movies can achieve any further debasement in the gross-out sweepstakes. And then along comes Tomcats. Read more