42
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75New York PostNew York PostIt'll mainly appeal to film-biz insiders.
- 70VarietyLisa NesselsonVarietyLisa NesselsonA refreshingly unpretentious cocktail of karmic serendipity and a tongue-in-cheek look at Hollywood values vs. ecumenical verities.
- 60Village VoiceBenjamin StrongVillage VoiceBenjamin StrongThe movie, as an exercise in narcissism, is breathtaking.
- 50Portland OregonianM. E. RussellPortland OregonianM. E. RussellDoes have its charms. While the videography and most of the supporting performances are amateurish, Clark and Caland are winning actors.
- 40L.A. WeeklyErnest HardyL.A. WeeklyErnest HardyThe result is at once a woefully overfamiliar bashing of Hollywood superficiality and a seemingly unwitting paean to the self-absorbed enlightenment that passes among industry folk for personal growth.
- 40The New York TimesJanet MaslinThe New York TimesJanet MaslinIn Hollywood Buddha, Mr. Caland plays, directs and reimagines himself. This is truly a vanity project, as evidenced by the ample amount of screen time he gives his own pecs and thighs.
- 38New York Daily NewsElizabeth WeitzmanNew York Daily NewsElizabeth WeitzmanThis off-putting satire is a jumble of misguided ideas that gather like lint in the navel of self-obsessed director Philippe Caland.
- Isn't remotely funny or pointed enough to qualify as satire. Intentionally or not, it comes across instead as a portrait of a man whose self-regard knows no limits.