
Porter Stoddard is a well-known New York architect who is at a crossroads... a nexus where twists and turns lead to myriad missteps, some with his wife Ellie, others with longtime friends Mona and her husband Griffin. Deciding which direction to take often leads to unexpected encounters with hilarious consequences.... (Full plot summary below)
Enjoy FREE movies and series with your Prime (USA) subscription or when you start a 30-day free trial!
Links compiled using automated software. Availability of offers subject to change / might be region specific / out of date.
Porter Stoddard is a well-known New York architect who is at a crossroads... a nexus where twists and turns lead to myriad missteps, some with his wife Ellie, others with longtime friends Mona and her husband Griffin. Deciding which direction to take often leads to unexpected encounters with hilarious consequences.
Leave your thoughts about Town & Country.
| AboutFilm.comCarlo Cavagnathe nondescript direction and slipshod film editing... fail to draw out any of the conflicts in an interesting way |
| Toronto StarGeoff PevereTown & Country is no Ishtar, but it's no Shampoo either. |
| Detroit Free PressTerry LawsonIt should have quietly skulked off to the Hamptons, where it couldn't annoy the nonprivileged with its pointlessness and irrelevancy. |
| NewsdayGene SeymourStuff gets thrown into the mix literally from several directions, in the vain hope that the story will organically cohere. |
| Boston GlobeJay CarrThere is really nothing wrong with Peter Chelsom's Town & Country that younger stars would not have solved. |
| One Guy's OpinionFrank SwietekThe thing might have been edited in a Cuisinart. |
| Salon.comAndrew O'HehirIt may be a haphazard mess, but it's actually pretty funny. |
| The New York TimesStephen HoldenWhat it does offer, however, are the pleasures of watching its seasoned stars expertly go through their familiar paces. |
| Miami HeraldRene RodriguezWhere Town and Country gets really good and weird – and I do mean good – is only after about an hour into it in deepest, darkest Idaho. |
| New Times (L.A.)Andy KleinNowhere near as bad as distributor New Line seems to think. |