Two Night Stand 2014

Critics score:
38 / 100

Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes

Sara Stewart, New York Post: As a testament to the power of good old-fashioned face-to-face conversation as aphrodisiac, the film works fairly well, if not as a primer on safe online dating. Read more

Ella Taylor, Variety: "Two Night Stand's" strength lies in the doubts and the ambivalence it expresses about the way we love now. Read more

Jenni Miller, AV Club: Two Night Stand comes so close to saying something insightful about dating in the digital age that the inevitable letdown is more bitter than usual. Read more

James Rocchi, Film.com: Charming but contrived, more slapdash than sexy and more interested in late-act reversals than real-life relationships, "Two Night Stand" isn't really going to scratch anyone's itchy spots, no matter how far it's willing to go in trying to do so. Read more

Stephen Farber, Hollywood Reporter: A likeable but forgettable trifle. Read more

Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times: It turns out "Two Night Stand" is a one-act sex comedy badly in need of two more - acts, not nights. Read more

Amy Nicholson, L.A. Weekly: Honest? Sure. Romantic, funny, and charming? Not even close. Read more

Elizabeth Weitzman, New York Daily News: Teller is, by far, the best thing about this easygoing, stubbornly generic independent romance from Max Nichols. Read more

Ben Kenigsberg, New York Times: It's hard not to root for this couple - and, more to the point, these actors - to get together again. Read more

Tirdad Derakhshani, Philadelphia Inquirer: Featuring strong dialogue and terrific performances, the film has moments of near-brilliance, but falls apart with a lame, conventional ending. Read more

Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle: "Two Night Stand" has its moments. But moments are all this movie has - and all its characters are likely to get. Read more

Tom Huddleston, Time Out: Yet another would-be charming male fantasy about how even the smartest girls can be charmed out of their pants by a schlubby doofus with a penchant for heavy negging. Read more

Stephanie Merry, Washington Post: As with most romantic comedies, the story falls apart with the formulaic injection of tension and the ensuing resolution, which is utterly outrageous even by rom-com standards. Read more