Metacritic Film

Kate & Leopold

Starring Meg Ryan, Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber, Breckin Meyer, Natasha Lyonne, Bradley Whitford, Philip Bosco, and Bart DeFinna

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for brief strong language

Miramax Films
Romance
90 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 21, 2001

The story of two strangers in New York City, separated by a hundred years. When they meet, a century's worth of differences come crashing together. (Miramax Films)

WRITTEN BY
James Mangold
Steven Rogers (also story)

DIRECTED BY
James Mangold

Overall Metascore

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

44 / 100

Critic Reviews

80 Time
Given that this holiday film season has come up more than a little short on love and laughter, one can easily forgive Kate & Leopold the slightly excessive lengths and complications to which it goes in search of those rare commodities.
75 Boston Globe
It's a charmer.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
For the first half-hour I, too, demurred. And then the irresistible force that is Hugh Jackman -- or was it his swoony Leopold? -- swept me off my seat and into the movie.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
Meg Ryan does this sort of thing about as well as it can possibly be done, and after "Sleepless in Seattle" and "You've Got Mail," here is another ingenious plot that teases us with the possibility that true love will fail, while winking that, of course, it will prevail.
70 LA Weekly
This winning confection, from a director (Heavy, Cop Land) not known for the lightness of his material or his touch, shows a fine understanding of what the screenwriters of the '40s instinctively grasped, that good screwball is about dialogue and chemistry.
67 Entertainment Weekly
It's no myth: All play and no work makes Jackman, as Leopold, a doll of a boyfriend.
63 New York Post
Has its heart in the right place -- and in a season filled with somber or goopy Oscar contenders, it makes a perfectly decent date movie.
60 Rolling Stone
Director and co-writer James Mangold (Girl, Interrupted) is supplying comfort food for bruised romantics.
50 TV Guide
Once it settles down, it becomes a star-making vehicle for Jackman, and a supremely polished example of the sort of swoony love story cherished by women who secretly hope that some day their prince will come.
50 Variety Lael Loewenstein
A time-travel romantic comedy whose best elements -- Meg Ryan and Hugh Jackman -- overcome distracting plot holes, loose threads and assorted contrivances to make for a mostly charming and diverting tale.
50 USA Today
Lacking in originality.
50 San Francisco Chronicle Carla Meyer
The role of Kate, a spunky but romantically unfulfilled marketing expert, seems made for Ryan. Unfortunately, Ryan no longer seems made for it.
50 Chicago Reader
Not very believable, even in relation to its own premises, but if you were charmed by "Somewhere in Time" and/or Jack Finney's novel "Time and Again," this might charm you as well.
50 Film Threat
There's no question that Meg Ryan is the queen of romantic comedies. Yet for every piece of frothy fluff that works -- there comes a couple where you just want to say, "Enough already." Kate & Leopold is one such movie.
50 The New York Times
Has only the most tangential relation to reality, and therein lies its slender charm.
50 Los Angeles Times
A flawed time-travel love story, benefits from Meg Ryan's reliable perkiness and establishes Australia's Hugh Jackman as a potent romantic leading man. These and other pluses, however, cannot overcome the film's inability to come alive for a full hour and 20 minutes.
42 Portland Oregonian
America's favorite romantic comedian is miscast in Kate & Leopold -- a disappointment with the warm and charming Jackman around.
42 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Progressively sabotaged by poor technical quality, terrible plotting, a glaring lack of directorial skill and finesse, scenes that have no credibility and/or motivation and an astounding sloppiness to its historical detail.
40 New Times (L.A.)
Mangold gets stuck in the gooey sweet spots of his tale a little more often than he breaks loose with a bracing jolt of perversity.
40 Salon.com
The problem with Kate & Leopold is that although this is supposed to be a romantic comedy, the best scenes are the ones in which there's no Ryan.
40 Wall Street Journal
Reasonably entertaining time-travel romance.
40 Austin Chronicle
There's nothing terribly wrong with Kate & Leopold -- it's just an awfully conventional upmarket romantic comedy.
38 Chicago Tribune
An oppressively cute Manhattan time-travel romantic comedy that’s lost in time, space and cliches.
38 Charlotte Observer
Has the sex appeal of a Road Runner cartoon, one-tenth the laughs and equal plausibility.
30 Washington Post
It just isn't a Meg Ryan movie unless she's got male.
20 Village Voice
The shabby metaphysics and complete absence of internal logic are perhaps meant to charm, but only add to the eye-gouging irritant factor.
20 Washington Post
Is Meg Ryan going to play the goofy romantic gal forever?

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