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| The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Barry HertzThe familiar and facile elements are drowned out – often, and loudly – by the impeccable comedic talents of Hill and Murphy, two performers whose very different styles clash and complement one another. |
| Washington PostMichael O'SullivanYou People sounds preachy, doesn’t it? Trust me, it’s not. What it really is is a master class on wedge issues and our shared humanity, delivered by comedians who know that laughter can be at once a bitter pill and the best medicine. |
| ConsequencePaolo RagusaThe chemistry between the two leads may not be indestructible, but luckily, their comedic chops and charismatic air give us a lot to root for. |
| IndieWireChristian ZilkoYou People ends up being more of a feel-good rom-com and love letter to Los Angeles than a truly biting satire, but you’d have to hate fun to complain about that. |
| The Hollywood ReporterSheri LindenIt comes on like gangbusters and keeps generating belly laughs well past the halfway point, slowing down then to take a GPS-directed turn into familiar romance territory. |
| The Associated PressMark KennedyHill and “black-ish” creator Kenya Barris have written a rom-com with teeth, a film not afraid to air long-simmering cultural grievances. |
| IGNSiddhant AdlakhaIt’s a film that fits perfectly within the confines of a romantic comedy even while it swaps out every familiar element and explores brand-new dimensions in the process. |
| Entertainment WeeklyLeah GreenblattThe movie is much better when it relaxes its death grip on screenwriter-y punchlines and slapstick cringe and just allows its cavalcade of stars to act like actual, you know, people. |
| SlashfilmJosh SpiegelRelative to some other Netflix Originals, as well as some other recent romantic comedies, this movie has some pretty solid laughs. But there are a number of moments in this new film where the script backs away from being more provocative or difficult. It's a shame too because the cast (Hill included) seem able and willing even if the material doesn't always want to take the same plunge. |
| The New York TimesLisa KennedyHill and London build on a nice vibe. Their characters are playful and frisky, in sync with their eye rolling and mouthing of apologies from across a room. |