53
Metascore
9 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80Los Angeles TimesGary GoldsteinLos Angeles TimesGary GoldsteinIf writer-director Sam Hoffman’s charming, well-performed tale feels at all familiar, it’s territory worth revisiting.
- Clement channels his wry hangdog humor into a slightly more grounded performance than he often gives. His charm and absurdist tendencies help elevate Nate from a potentially self-centered man-child to a lost soul who is genuinely compelling.
- 63Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreHumor Me is never much more than a comfort food comedy — funny people, given mildly funny situations and just enough funny things to say, find a few laughs and a lot of grins.
- The movie never gets too deep, which is half of its charm. The other half involves the low-key comic performances by a stellar cast including Annie Potts and Bebe Neuwirth.
- 60VarietyAndrew BarkerVarietyAndrew BarkerHumor Me manages to earn its audience’s indulgence, if never its full affection.
- 50Slant MagazineChuck BowenSlant MagazineChuck BowenSam Hoffman respects his characters and evinces curiosity about their lives—and these qualities aren't to be taken for granted. But he isn't willing to disrupt his familiar and tightly structured plot.
- 40Village VoiceApril WolfeVillage VoiceApril WolfeHoffman’s feature debut is hampered by well-worn tropes the writer-director seems at first to be aware of — and playing with — before he leans so hard into them that whatever originality the film at first displayed crashes right into a well of rom-com cliché.
- 38RogerEbert.comSimon AbramsRogerEbert.comSimon AbramsWriter/director Sam Hoffman's trite dramedy about personal redemption delivers mediocre performances.
- 33ConsequenceDanielle SolzmanConsequenceDanielle SolzmanHumor Me is essentially the feature film adaption of writer-director Sam Hoffman‘s web series Old Jews Telling Jokes, and much like ideas that are typically created for a web series, the execution of the material appears to be just a bit too lacking to serve the purpose of a full-length film.