Your Company
 

French Kiss

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, United States · 1995
Rated PG-13 · 1h 51m
Director Lawrence Kasdan
Starring Meg Ryan, Kevin Kline, Timothy Hutton, Jean Reno
Genre Comedy, Romance

French Kiss is director Kasdan’s best film since the Bodyguard. The plot involves a couple in love and one woman’s attempt to fly to Paris to get her lover back from a business trip and marry him. On the way she unknowingly smuggles something of value that has a petty thief chasing her across France as she chases after her future husband.

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

30

Austin Chronicle by

What it all boils down to is that if you don't mind that artificially flavored, plastic-bagged, stale pink and purple stuff that gets passed off as cotton candy these days, you will probably like French Kiss. But if I'm going to indulge in the sweet stuff, it needs to be fresher than this.

50

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

The delicate air of romance that often makes this sort of film worthwhile is absent. French Kiss does it by the numbers, not from the heart.

40

The New York Times by Janet Maslin

French Kiss may have a more putatively foolproof formula, but everyone here has done vastly more interesting work. Too much gets lost in translation.

25

Boston Globe by Jay Carr

French Kiss is a French miss. It's got the settings, but it has little magic, less charm and almost no chemistry between Meg Ryan's heartsick American innocent and Kevin Kline's shady Frenchman. [5 May 1995, p.57]

75

San Francisco Chronicle by Mick LaSalle

Ryan's comic timing continues to delight, while Kline is touchingly heartfelt as a man doing what is evidently all too easy to do -- fall in love with Meg Ryan.

60

Los Angeles Times by Peter Rainer

French Kiss tries to be a glass of pink champagne, but some of the fizz has gone out of the bottle. But director Lawrence Kasdan and screenwriter Adam Brooks cram so many potshots into the piece that, after a while, it makes you laugh anyway.

50

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Kline's Frenchman is somehow not worldly enough, and Ryan's heroine never convinces us she ever loved her fiance in the first place. A movie about this kind of material either should be about people who feel true passion or should commit itself as a comedy. Compromise is pointless.

Users who liked this film also liked