
Jeffrey, a young gay man in New York, decides that sex is too much and decides to become celibate. He immediately meets the man of his dreams and must decide whether or not love is worth the danger of a boyfriend dying.... (Full plot summary below)
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Jeffrey, a young gay man in New York, decides that sex is too much and decides to become celibate. He immediately meets the man of his dreams and must decide whether or not love is worth the danger of a boyfriend dying.
Leave your thoughts about Jeffrey.
| Sacramento BeeJoe BaltakeIt comes with a superficially sunny sitcom adorableness that ... mixes well with Rudnick's smart, scathing, urban and very dark one-liners. |
| Hartford CourantMalcolm JohnsonEvery scene with Stewart and Batt delivers at least one masterstroke. But hilarious moments stud Rudnick's screenplay. His knack for dialogue and satire calls to mind some of the great screenwriters of Hollywood's golden era |
| ReelViewsJames BerardinelliIf nothing else, Rudnick and director Christopher Ashley know how to keep the audience off balance and in stitches. |
| Washington PostHal HinsonWhile this may sound intriguing, the picture merely jumps around clumsily from incident to incident. |
| San Francisco ExaminerBarry WaltersA charming, proudly old-fashioned screwball comedy. |
| Boxoffice MagazineJean OppenheimerA warm and humorous -- as well as a sad and moving -- exploration of all-too-human relationships. |
| Deseret News (Salt Lake City)Chris HicksSome of this is amusing but most simply isn't funny enough to support off-the-wall antics laced with poignancy. |
| Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertIt's more a series of sketches and momentary inspirations than a story that grows interesting. |
| Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)Ken HankeA miscast lead, but Patrick Stewart makes it all worthwhile. |
| Rolling StonePeter TraversRudnick, adapting his off-Broadway hit, deftly blends uproarious fun and touching gravity. |