Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
While Jonathan Lisecki is well in tune with his film's niche market, his knack for comedy, both visual and verbal, is universally hilarious. Read full review
Harris, a talented comic actress who looks more like a real person than a Hollywood facsimile of one, makes every scene she's in shine. Read full review
Gayby doesn't break a lot of new ground in the rom-com or parenthood fields, but its agreeable balance of humor and sentiment makes it worth adopting. Read full review
Although it traffics freely in stereotypes and sitcom-style one-liners, Gayby is never less than likable. Read full review
Gayby isn't groundbreaking, but it's a fun romp whose characters grow on you after spending some time with them. Read full review
The baby angle is really just a hook on which to hang wry commentary about single life in the city, but Lisecki approaches his subject with obvious affection, and the game cast makes most of the sitcom-silly antics work. Read full review
The film develops into a sweet, surprisingly persuasive comedy about friends transitioning into family. Read full review
Making a kid "the old-fashioned way" becomes the plot engine for the second time this year - after Jennifer Westfeldt's "Friends With Kids" - in Gayby, a comedy that, much like the perfunctory p-in-the-v it depicts, gives about 30 seconds of pleasure before going limp. Read full review
Inoffensive and low-key, Gayby is too diffuse to have much pop when it comes to the topics at hand: love and friendship, and how unconventional modern permutations might help rewrite the script of romance. Read full review