This video sequel to the gay comedy "Eating Out" (2004) is funnier, lighter, and faster paced.
70
Film ThreatPhil Hall
Film ThreatPhil Hall
The ultimate rarity: a sequel that is miles ahead of its predecessor in every imaginable department.
50
VarietyRobert Koehler
VarietyRobert Koehler
Sequel is no more than a cheapo campy goof, but this edition does contain a higher quota of laugh lines and an unsubtle message that efforts to make gay youth "go straight" is destined to fail.
50
Village Voice
Village Voice
As before, the fun is somewhat capped by absurdly stilted acting and daytime-soap-quality DV, but the nonstop sub-Araki glibbage is plenty peppy and so is Rebekah Kochan's ding-a-ling Tiffani, a dead ringer for 90210's Tori Spelling.
50
Boston GlobeWesley Morris
Boston GlobeWesley Morris
This sequel, with the return of the first movie's insatiably slutty Los Angeles collegians, is as vulgar as its predecessor and just as almost-smart.
A Rubik’s Cube of shifting sexual orientation and elaborate sex fantasies, “Sloppy Seconds” gathers all the accouterments of soft pornography -- cheesy music, low-rent acting and attractively framed genitals -- into a plot of stunning imbecility.
25
Chicago TribuneMichael Wilmington
Chicago TribuneMichael Wilmington
A soft-core sex comedy that keeps throwing out comic variations on the idea of the line between gay and straight sexuality.
25
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Chronicle
A rollicking comedy for the gay niche that rarely rises above the level of a high school skit, Phillip J. Bartell's sequel to 2004's "Eating Out" is loaded with silliness and eye candy.