Critics Scoreboard
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Average Critic Score:




50
(22 sources)




50
(22 sources)
-
83




Entertainment Weekly
Devious and inspired enough to juice you past any weak spots. Thou shalt be amused. Read Full Review » -
75




The Onion (A.V. Club)
The early, explosively funny skits and a loose, engagingly adventurous spirit are enough to ensure this uneven but often delightful project the cult fame that accompanies pretty much everything associated with Stella mainstay Wain. Read Full Review » -
75




San Francisco Chronicle
Fundamentalists might take umbrage, but The Ten is not so much blasphemous as it is very silly, and it lives up to the one unbendable commandment of comedy: It's funny. Read Full Review » -
70




Chicago Reader
Wain and Marino try to tie all this together with a framing narrative about an unfaithful husband (Paul Rudd), which turns into a clever parody of Woody Allen movies. Read Full Review » -
70




Variety
Second feature from duo David Wain and Ken Marino of comedy group the State is, like their "Wet Hot American Summer," uneven but often hilarious. Read Full Review » -
70




Village Voice
More often than not, you'll laugh, and that's all you can hope for in what might as well be a prolonged episode of "The State," from which several of the cast and creators sprang. Read Full Review » -
63




Philadelphia Inquirer
Gretchen Mol stars as a 35-year-old virgin deflowered in lusty romance-novel fashion on a trip to Mexico. Her hunky lover-boy's name? Jesus Christ (played by Justin Theroux). The segment? "Thou shalt not take the Lord's name in vain." Read Full Review » -
60




Washington Post
An uneven, sophomoric and only fitfully funny omnibus of skits, The Ten is one of those silly-on-purpose ensemble exercises that must have been wildly fun to make. Read Full Review » -
60




Film Threat
Let's talk about Paul Rudd. I think he may be in every film in 2007 and that's okay by me, because Paul Rudd has become an acting Man-God. Read Full Review » -
50




ReelViews
There are lengthy stretches during this movie when it's deadly dull. This is the kind of film that's ideal for DVD viewing. Judicious use of the fast forward button will greatly increase The Ten's appeal. Read Full Review » -
50




Seattle Post-Intelligencer
As sketch comedy, The Ten often is imaginative and sometimes hilarious...Still, like precursors from "The Groove Tube" to "Jackass," it doesn't make for much of a movie. Read Full Review » -
50




Premiere
The Ten has one foot in "Monty Python's Meaning of Life" and another in their "Life of Brian," but ultimately we get the David Letterman School of Comedy: mediocre jokes continually repeated until they sometimes become uncomfortably funny. Read Full Review » -
50




New York Daily News
The Ten is so proud of its own wit and irreverence that when you fail to be equally impressed, you are likely to wonder if your own sense of humor is, in some way, deficient. Rest assured it is not. Read Full Review » -
50




New York Post
The funniest and arguably most envelope-pushing episode stars Winona Ryder as a newlywed who falls in love on her honeymoon - and steals the object of her lust: a ventriloquist's dummy. Read Full Review » -
50




The New York Times
A "Decalogue" for special-ed students, The Ten leans too often toward the bizarre and the bewildering. And though rough sex is a recurring motif, the movie's overall tone is less blasphemous than raunchy. Read Full Review » -
50




Miami Herald
By flaunting its own stupidity, The Ten practically dares you not to laugh at it, like a stand-up comic who sells an unfunny joke through the ferocity of his delivery. Read Full Review » -
42




Portland Oregonian
Yet another witless, listless outing by the alleged comic minds behind such dubious treats as "The State," "Stella" and "Wet Hot American Summer." Read Full Review » -
40




Los Angeles Times
David Wain, director of "Wet Hot American Summer," brings his popular brand of surrealist yet mundane humor to the big screen with more or less dreadful results. Read Full Review » -
38




Chicago Tribune
The Ten changes tone every few minutes, ranging from lowbrow gross-out gags to elevated language to a big, sloppy musical number. Read Full Review » -
30




Austin Chronicle
The Ten offers a brand of comedy for very particularized tastes, though everyone should appreciate the in-joke of featuring Ryder in the skit about the Eighth Commandment. For those of you less versed in the Bible, that's the one that says thou shall not steal. Read Full Review » -
25




TV Guide
Everyone involved seems to have been operating from the presumption that gross and blasphemous equals hilarious. Would that it did. Read Full Review » -
25




Boston Globe
The Ten is a virtually snicker-free exercise in audience pain. It's less a movie than an endurance test. Read Full Review »
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