35
Metascore
24 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 50Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertI guess there's an audience for it, and Ice Cube has paid dues in better and more positive movies ("Barbershop" among them). But surely laughs can be found in something other than this worked-over material.
- 50Miami HeraldRene RodriguezMiami HeraldRene RodriguezThe third -- and thinnest and weakest and least funny -- installment in Ice Cube's popular Friday series.
- 50USA TodayMike ClarkUSA TodayMike ClarkAnyone who pays to see it will certainly feel as if he has been clipped.
- 50Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanEntertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanThe movie is altogether too infatuated with its ramshackle spirit. Most of the gags take after the characters -- they just sit there.
- 40TV Guide MagazineMaitland McDonaghTV Guide MagazineMaitland McDonaghIt's familiar, undemanding and not as bad as it could have been, but you can't help thinking that somewhere else, there's a real party going on.
- 30Dallas ObserverLuke Y. ThompsonDallas ObserverLuke Y. ThompsonDirector Marcus Raboy hasn't made a bad movie, exactly -- just one that seems to have forgotten its own jokes, much as those who watch it will forget everything about it a week later, stoned or not.
- 25Baltimore SunChris KaltenbachBaltimore SunChris KaltenbachIf you do insist on seeing this film, don't arrive late: the clever, animated opening credits are a stitch, suggesting a sprightliness of touch and winsome wickedness of tone that's missing from the rest of the movie.
- 20Washington PostDesson ThomsonWashington PostDesson ThomsonLacks the spirit of the previous two, and makes all those jokes about hos and even more unmentionable subjects seem like mere splashing around in the muck.
- 20Chicago ReaderHank SartinChicago ReaderHank Sartin"Friday" had moments of stoned charm and telling neighborhood detail; this second sequel never gets beyond the angry, cruel, and misogynist.
- 20L.A. WeeklyErnest HardyL.A. WeeklyErnest HardyLoud, chaotic and largely unfunny (veteran actors John Witherspoon and Anna Maria Horsford seem at best indifferent to the material), Friday After Next is the graceless sodomizing of a cult classic.