Metacritic Film

Groundhog Day

Starring Bill Murray, Andie MacDowell, Chris Elliott, Stephen Tobolowsky, Brian Doyle-Murray, Marita Geraghty, and Rick Ducommun

MPAA RATING: PG-13

Columbia Pictures
Comedy
101 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters February 12, 1993

Teamed with a relentlessly cheerful producer (MacDowell) and a smart-aleck cameraman (Elliott), TV weatherman Phil Connors (Murray) is sent to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, to cover the annual Groundhog Day festivities. But on his way out of town, Phil is caught in a giant blizzard, which he failed to predict, and finds himself stuck in small-town hell. Just when things couldn't get worse, they get worse; Phil wakes the next morning to find it's Groundhog Day all over again... and again... and again. (Sony)

WRITTEN BY
Danny Rubin (also story)
Harold Ramis

DIRECTED BY
Harold Ramis

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

72 / 100

Critic Reviews

90 Washington Post
For once, the audience isn't forced to surrender its intelligence (or its healthy cynicism) to embrace the film's sunny resolution.
90 The Onion (A.V. Club)
A hilarious and unexpectedly profound comedy.
88 ReelViews
This movie has all the qualities necessary to be a crowd-pleaser: likable characters, charismatic performers, a strong, capably-executed premise, and lots of laughs.
80 Time
[Murray] has the natural actor's charm of making manners matter. He carries Groundhog Day with his uniquely frittery nonchalance and makes the movie a comic time warp anyone should be happy to get stuck in. [15 Feb 1993, p.63]
80 The New Republic
Murray, more often than not, is pretty unbearable; but here, playing a man who is unbearable, Murray begins convincingly, amusingly, and gets even more amusing as he metamorphoses. [15 Mar 1993, p.24]
80 The New York Times
That glimmer of recognition is what makes Groundhog Day a particularly witty and resonant comedy, even when its jokes are more apt to prompt gentle giggles than rolling in the aisles.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
A demonstration of the way time can sometimes give us a break.
70 TV Guide Staff (Not Credited)
Seeing it once is fine, but seeing it every day for the rest of your life is not recommended.
67 Entertainment Weekly
The funniest moments in Groundhog Day come when Phil takes sneaky advantage of his predicament-by, say, pumping a sexy woman in the local coffee shop for facts about her past and then, ''the next day,'' using the information to lure her into bed. What the movie lacks is the ingenious, lapidary comic structure that could have made these moments fuse into something tricky and wild.
67 Austin Chronicle Louis Black
There were a lot of ways for this film to go stupid; it succumbs to none of them.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Dial your expectations to moderate, burrow in for the duration, and you won't be disappointed - it ain't exactly springtime, but there are worse things than an amiable outing on a winter's night.
60 Chicago Reader
Considering that none of the characters is fresh or interesting, it's a commendable achievement that the quality of the storytelling alone keeps the movie watchable and likable.
60 Variety Staff (Not Credited)
The film is inconsistent in tone and pace; fortunately the pay-off works, bringing some much needed warmth to the area.
60 Washington Post
With its zany daily episodes, "Groundhog" gets stuck in a non-progressive repetition.

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