81
Metascore
37 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100HitfixDrew McWeenyHitfixDrew McWeenyTop Five is, above everything else, really entertaining. It is a successful sophisticated spin on Hollywood formula, and it feels like Chris Rock finally finding a filmmaking voice that is just as limber and funny and sharply satirical and angry and even romantic as Rock's stand-up.
- 100The Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerThe Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerIt’s like watching a first-rate standup routine transformed into fiction, or in this case auto-fiction, as Rock has more on his mind than just making us laugh, offering up a witty celebrity satire that doubles as a love story set during one long and eventful New York City day.
- 100Village VoiceStephanie ZacharekVillage VoiceStephanie ZacharekChris Rock couldn't have planned it this way, but his exuberant and wondrous comedy Top Five, opening at just the right time, is like an airdrop of candy over the city, if not the country.
- 100Tampa Bay TimesSteve PersallTampa Bay TimesSteve PersallTop Five is the funniest movie I've seen this year, and the calendar's running out. No matter whose movie Rock's resembles, it is completely his, and a brash start to being taken seriously as an artist.
- 91The PlaylistKevin JagernauthThe PlaylistKevin JagernauthIt avoids the trap of simply being a celebrity vehicle about celebrity, by displaying a surprising heart beneath its very funny surface.
- 91Entertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyEntertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyAs brilliantly funny as Chris Rock is, he's never been able to replicate the high-voltage danger and electricity of his stand-up act on the big screen. But in his latest film, the sharply satirical Top Five, he not only makes a case for why he should be a bona fide movie star, he also proves he's a writer-director to be reckoned with.
- 90VarietyScott FoundasVarietyScott FoundasRock is enormously appealing here, balancing his patented comic abrasiveness with a real tenderness, the faint bewilderment of an ordinary man blindsided by his own success. And Dawson makes an excellent foil.
- 63McClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreMcClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreRock is more a genial presence here than an actor playing an addict tested by a bad day. He never lets us see the strain that could make him fall off the wagon. He scores laughs, but generously leaves the outrageous stuff to his legion of supporting players.
- 63New York PostKyle SmithNew York PostKyle SmithIf Top Five doesn’t go deep, though, it is intermittently very funny.