Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
You should know right up front that even if you realize you're being manipulated you are probably going to weep anyway. Read full review
What's missing is honesty. It has been supplanted by artifice. Read full review
The tiniest bit of Hudson's wrinkly-crinkly cuteness goes a long way, and in A Little Bit of Heaven, watching her waste away becomes slow torture. She's like an adorbs Camille. Read full review
In the long history of bad movies about bad illnesses, A Little Bit of Heaven just might be the worst. Read full review
Unsurprisingly for a film detailing terminal disease, this is a largely solemn affair, often verging on morbidity in its elongated deathwatch. Read full review
An awkward mixture of melodrama and whimsical romantic comedy that should make the briefest of appearances in theaters before, like its main character, moving on to other planes. It might serve a valuable purpose if it at least prompts viewers to finally schedule those long delayed colonoscopies. Read full review
Terminal colon cancer has never looked more fetching than in the critically ill romantic-disease comedy A Little Bit of Heaven. Read full review
With the abysmal A Little Bit of Heaven, Kate Hudson's possibly unprecedented losing streak remains unbroken: She hasn't made a good movie since Almost Famous, 12 long years ago. Even Nicolas Cage can't say that. Read full review
As far as director Nicole Kassell and writer Gren Wells are concerned, the C in Big C must stand for cute. The film reaches into the pits of moviegoing hell when it finds Marley on a celestial white couch, ringed in billowing white curtains, communing with God. And God is embodied by Whoopi Goldberg. Read full review
Droolingly stupid weepie. Useful tip: The movie dies way quicker than she does. Read full review
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Hellish Read full review