If only they had allowed their characters to develop naturally after those first mismatched meetings, Km. 0 might have ventured into more intriguing territory.
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What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
There's lots of half-naked flesh on display, and an enticing sense of hot action afoot (especially between the two gay guys), but the directors seem timid about sex, and really, what's the point of being Spanish if you're afraid to show the good stuff?
The New York Times by Dave Kehr
Unfolds, skipping blithely from comic to melodramatic vignettes and back again, it follows the classical structure of a Shakespearean forest comedy, sorting out the mismatched couples and finding appropriate mates (or at least appropriate friendships) for everyone involved.
San Francisco Chronicle by Edward Guthmann
A superficial diversion.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
A light-footed comedy that suggests that for even the most desperate, love is just around the corner.
Like any good soap opera, the script deftly flits among story lines, offering just enough tantalizing plot development to keep you sticking around for another bite.
Village Voice by Laura Sinagra
Aiming for Almodóvar lite, the flick is more reminiscent of "The Love Boat" -- drenched this time in cheery polysexuality. Everyone is an angel (and a horny little devil) in this breezy earthly trifle, even if the zaniness never quite takes wing.
New York Post by Megan Lehmann
There are more misses than hits among the myriad plot strands that make up the sweaty Spanish sex comedy KM.0.
The film flits from one relationship to another, dispensing some well-acted bedroom scenes and a fair amount of angst and philosophical dialogue in a neighborhood bar.
Lightweight yet alluring.