25
San Francisco Examiner by Barbara Shulgasser
The big trouble with the movie is that it's difficult to care whether these two get together. Ultimately I did care - when I realized that their union would presumably represent a chance that the movie might end soon.
25
San Francisco Chronicle by Edward Guthmann
Boyle isn't the first British or European filmmaker to make his obligatory zesty American road movie (apparently it's a dream for anyone raised on American cinema), but knowing that doesn't make A Life Less Ordinary any less tiring or its numerous pilferings any less obvious or annoying.
60
The New York Times by Elvis Mitchell
Mr. Boyle's brand of heaven-sent love story comes with a strange and whimsical mean streak. Tender thoughts and ha-ha shootings don't automatically mix.
63
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
From start to finish, A Life Less Ordinary feels like a group of sometimes amusing, sometimes clever, and sometimes tedious skits forced to fit together.
11
Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov
A Life Less Ordinary fails on so many levels it's nearly a textbook case of What Not to Do.
75
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
The movie damn near lives up to that promise. Picture the Marx brothers and the Coen boys collaborating on a valentine spiked with mirth and malice.
50
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Rick Groen
Here, one begins to suspect that the major impediment is the sensibility of the filmmakers themselves. They don't believe in this stuff, in its unavoidable sentimentality, and that attitude filters down to a perplexed cast.
50
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
The film expends enormous energy to tell a story that is tedious and contrived.
80
Salon by Stephanie Zacharek
Gloriously excessive, passionate and messy, A Life Less Ordinary is the kind of picture that's becoming more and more of a rarity in the landscape of American movies: a love story with a hard-on.
10
Washington Post by Stephen Hunter
The new film by the phenomenally talented Scots-English trio of director Danny Boyle, producer Andrew MacDonald and screenwriter John Hodge -- they did both "Shallow Grave" and "Trainspotting" -- is a failure so absolute and witless it deserves some kind of mention in the Hall of Lame.