
The world's deadliest assassin and New York's biggest screw-up are mistaken for each other at an Airbnb rental.... (Full plot summary below)
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The world's deadliest assassin and New York's biggest screw-up are mistaken for each other at an Airbnb rental.
Leave your thoughts about The Man from Toronto.
| IGNTara BennettKevin Hart and Woody Harrelson have solid goofball vs. grump chemistry in an entertaining action-comedy. |
| Paste MagazineNatalia KeoganWhile the Netflix Original film manages to sneak in a few genuinely funny moments, it’s not nearly as action-packed, suspenseful or humorous as it aims to be. |
| VarietyTomris LafflyA throwback buddy action-comedy that offsets its run-of-the-mill sense of humor with a pair of appealing leads. |
| ReelViewsJames BerardinelliThe Man from Toronto is derivative and forgettable; nothing about the venue in which it is seen will change that. |
| San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleAs a 110-minute diversion, as a source of some laughs, as an opportunity for two funny guys to be funny — and to be funny with each other — what’s not to like? Just go in not expecting much. |
| Movie NationRoger MooreThe leads click well enough. But every moment Hart and Harrelson aren’t on the screen, the film dies. The real torture in this torture comedy becomes the too-long wait for it to end. |
| TimeStephanie ZacharekThe Man From Toronto, a Netflix action-comedy starring Woody Harrelson and Kevin Hart, is the kind of movie you forget almost the minute the end credits have rolled, two hours of moderate laughs rolled up in a tissue-thin plot that just barely qualifies as a distraction from the dreariness of life. |
| IndieWireChristian ZilkoDespite a fun premise and a well-structured first act, “The Man from Toronto” tries to do too many things at once and devolves into a strange bouillabaisse of studio comedy tropes. |
| Boston GlobeMark FeeneyIt’s nasty and clumsy, tonally erratic, lacking in texture, and pretty stupid. |
| Chicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperThis is the kind of movie that keeps the great Ellen Barkin literally in the shadows as a criminal mastermind, and relegates the wonderful Kaley Cuoco to an embarrassing supporting role as a man-hungry best girlfriend who might as well have stepped out of a cheesy 1970s rom-com. Is anybody even trying here? |