SummaryRomy (Sorvino) and Michele (Kudrow) are carefree party girls who reinvent themselves for their 10-year high school reunion. With new wardrobes and wild stories of success, they make a big impression?until a former classmate (Garofalo) blabs their real story to everyone! But that's when Romy and Michele let loose with a surprise of their own?and o... Read More
Directed By:David Mirkin
Written By:Robin Schiff
Romy and Michele's High School Reunion
Metascore
Mixed or Average
60
User score
Generally Favorable
7.4
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
60
50% Positive
9 Reviews
9 Reviews
50% Mixed
9 Reviews
9 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
88
Kudrow's Michele is a deadpan delight as she joins fellow misfit Romy (a deliciously funny Mira Sorvino).
75
One of those pleasant movie-going experiences that doesn't offend, excite, or challenge anyone. There are all sorts of likable things about it.
User score
Generally Favorable
7.4
71% Positive
22 Ratings
22 Ratings
26% Mixed
8 Ratings
8 Ratings
3% Negative
1 Rating
1 Rating
Aug 28, 2022
10
Great acting and comedy throughout. All the high school rivalry and cliques play out in this over the top comedy about Romy and Michele as the navigate the social surprises and conflicts that are their high school reunion.
Jul 6, 2012
10
This is literally one of my favorite movies of all time! Mira Sorvino and Lisa Kudrow are perfect picks for these hilarious best friends/misfits! I can't watch this movie enough!
70
Despite the aggressive silliness of this enjoyable comedy, the emotional focus on the painful social experience of high school makes the film real and immediate, and the flavorsome dialogue in Robin Schiff's script gives the leads a lot to work (as well as play) with.
60
A candy-colored, superficially fizzy revenge fantasy with a startlingly corrosive undercurrent of bitterness and frustration.
60
As lightweight as it is, it's easy to feel real affection for the movie.
50
Okay, some of this is mildly diverting.
40
Sorvino and Kudrow, for whatever inscrutable reasons, seem to be having a blast with their ridiculous characters, and both shine in the loopy set-pieces and dream sequences that pepper the story.
Oct 26, 2025
9
This is a SERIOUSLY underrated movie. Yes, it's silly. Yes, it's a bit corny. But it's funny, and it has something to say, if it speaks to you. It ends so strong. Janine Garofalo in particular, has never been better. I don't know what to say - it's just fun.
May 24, 2020
8
I'm not sure the amount of time that has to pass before a film is considered a classic but this is definitely one to me. It's unique, funny, heartfelt and with a retro zing. Mira Sorvino (Mimic) and Lisa Kudrow (Friends) star as Romy and Michelle two bright, sassy, stylish young women who receive an invite to their high school reunion where they were once bullied and made fun of. To show up their old nemeses they come up with a plan to create two new, more impressive lives and get the respect they wanted for so long. Throw in a dream sequences, some hilarious jokes, great performances from the leads and Janeane Garofalo (Reality Bites) amongst others and a clever, heartfelt screenplay and you have the makings of this comedy classic. Revisiting it's easy to see why it's attained it's cult status. Budget: $20m
Box Office: $29m
Jan 3, 2015
7
Romy and Michele are a pair of deliciously fitting best friends with a knack for looking at life in a different way than everyone else. Cheers to them - and cheers to Kudrow and Sorvino for their terrific portrayals.
Jul 8, 2017
5
I had always heard this was a "guilty pleasure" or some kind of minor cult classic, and it being my own 10 year reunion this summer I thought I would finally check it out. Well I don't think it's either of those really, though I suppose guilty pleasure always fits to some degree. It's a just alright, broad, semi-funny look at female friendship above all else. Mira Sorvino's accent is the scene stealer here, it's some kind of Californian valley girl monstrosity that takes on a life of its own throughout the movie. Is it just me or does it become more pronounced when she returns to Tucson, where no one has that accent? Is this a subtle shade of "acting" on her part, the accent an affectation she picked up in SoCal to distance herself from her terrible adolescence? There's also Justin Theroux who plays a cowboy with a goofy southern accent. I've got nothing for that one.




























