
A womanizer teaches his clueless friend the rules about being single and avoiding emotional attachment.... (Full plot summary below)
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A womanizer teaches his clueless friend the rules about being single and avoiding emotional attachment.
Leave your thoughts about 6 Month Rule.
| Shockya.comBrent SimonIf the plotting and payoffs of this love triangle are a bit problematic and less satisfying than one wished, there are also pleasant inversions to be found in the film's finale, reminding viewers that every down is a prelude to an up, and vice versa. |
| CraveOnlineWitney SeiboldBudget indie-house comfort food for the '90s-romcom-besotted soul. |
| Village VoiceEric HynesAs with the latest Kate Hudson comedy, it's a formula for irrelevancy pretty much as a rule. |
| VarietyDennis HarveyEnsemble is sharp, although Adams and Dave Foley (as an obnoxious gallery owner) make more caricatured impressions. |
| New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisAn ostensible romantic comedy that's really just a grating portrait of an irredeemable jerk. |
| Slant MagazineAndrew SchenkerThe film is far too indulgent with its lead character to do more than hint at the ways that one form of male egotism can morph into another. |
| The Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckAn ineffective indie variation on the sort of generic romantic comedy that should be starring Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson. |
| Los Angeles TimesRobert AbeleWeaver's last ditch attempt to upend rom-com convention and rewrite the movie as a skeevy lout's comeuppance hardly makes up for the clichéd slog that comes before. |
| Cinemalogue.comTodd JorgensonThere are some scattered amusing moments among the supporting characters, but the protagonist is consistently smug and pretentious. |
| New York PostKyle SmithImagine Tucker Max minus the charm and you've got . . . well, Tucker Max, but also Blayne Weaver, the star-writer-director of the indie rom-com "6 Month Rule." |