Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
Susan Stark, Detroit News: Urbane, observant ... and read with expertise by its once-in-a-lifetime cast. Read more
John C. Davenport, Dallas Morning News: Beatty's performance consists primarily of looking befuddled. Read more
Geoff Pevere, Toronto Star: Town & Country is no Ishtar, but it's no Shampoo either. Read more
Stephen Holden, New York Times: It does offer ... the pleasures of watching its seasoned stars expertly go through their familiar paces. Read more
Pam Sitt, Seattle Times: Bland, disjointed and becomes increasingly bizarre as the film progresses. Read more
Eric Harrison, Houston Chronicle: An unfunny, unfocused mess. Read more
Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly: Coarse, clunky, jerry rigged, and -- worst of all -- not funny. Read more
Gene Seymour, Newsday: Stuff gets thrown into the mix literally from several directions, in the vain hope that the story will organically cohere. Read more
Peter Rainer, New York Magazine/Vulture: Read more
Andrew O'Hehir, Salon.com: It's all blissfully meaningless and irresponsible, but I laughed myself sick. Read more
Wesley Morris, San Francisco Chronicle: The movie's not bad enough to be world-ending, merely clumsy enough to make the offending studio exec clean out his desk. Read more
Dennis Lim, Village Voice: An antediluvian portrayal of male midlife crisis, reducing any imaginable extramarital complication to a crass matter of gender warfare. Read more
Stephen Hunter, Washington Post: The whole thing is too big, too loud, too expensive and has too much Diane Keaton. Read more
Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post: Nothing [the couples] can say or do can make me care whether they stay together or split up or turn gay. Read more