Top Secret! Reviews
Farah Cheded A Good Movie To Watch
A delightfully silly spoof [that] is blessedly under no illusions as to what we want from a movie like this.
Full Review | Aug 25, 2023
David Nusair Reel Film Reviews
...a hit-and-miss comedy that benefits from its stirring performances and smattering of hilarious set-pieces...
Full Review | Original Score: 2.5/4 | Jul 5, 2022
James Croot Stuff.co.nz
Along with his megawatt grin and pitch-perfect singing, which covers a range of musical genres, this was the moment that we saw a movie star born.
Full Review | Jun 27, 2022
Kathleen Carroll New York Daily News
Although there is no question that this free-swinging spoof... runs out of steam, it is a wonderfully flaky example of what Hollywood has to offer in this traditionally silly summer season.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Apr 20, 2021
Tom Setzer Fort Worth Star-Telegram/DFW.com
If you're in the mood for some frequently inspired silliness (and have been weakened by the heat) you'll no doubt find something to laugh at in this movie.
Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Apr 20, 2021
Laurie Horn Miami Herald
The jokes leave you tickled, but never build to a comic crescendo.
Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Apr 20, 2021
Patrick Taggart Austin American-Statesman
It's no classic, but Top Secret is funny, good-natured, and - with one exception early on involving a marital aid - clean.
Full Review | Apr 20, 2021
Kevin Thomas Los Angeles Times
The result is a non-stop barrage of gags, many of them inspired and hilarious themselves but scattershot in effect because the premise isn't sturdy or coherent enough to hold them together.
Full Review | Apr 20, 2021
Gene Siskel Chicago Tribune
Not even half as funny as "Airplane!' but still... a lot more clever than most movie comedies made today.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Apr 20, 2021
Allan Ulrich San Francisco Examiner
Abrahams-Zucker-Zucker scatter the jokes the way farmers scatter corn around a chicken house. They're shameless.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Apr 20, 2021
Jay Boyar Orlando Sentinel
It's amusing enough in a Mad magazine sort of way to be worth a look.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Apr 20, 2021
Joe Pollack St. Louis Post-Dispatch
lt's as if "Airplane" were a jam session in which fine musicians, through their spontaneity and improvisational talents, made noticeable improvements in a second-rate score, and "Top Secret" were the same tune, played note-for-note as written.
Full Review | Apr 20, 2021
Karl Vick Tampa Bay Times
Insouciance runs so deep in the film it extends clear down to the structure, which must be ingenious to support the film as nimbly as it does, but which appears to be ad hoc.
Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Apr 20, 2021
Bob McKelvey Detroit Free Press
Directors David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker have substituted chuckles for guffaws with less than side-splitting results.
Full Review | Original Score: 5/10 | Apr 20, 2021
Adrian Turner Radio Times
Not as funny as it should be, but entertaining enough.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Apr 20, 2021
Will Wade Common Sense Media
There are so many jokes, puns, sly references, sight gags, and recurring bits that two or three strike home for every one that misses the mark.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Apr 20, 2021
Gary Arnold Washington Post
The trio of Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker approach movie comedy as a systematic exaggeration of genre cliche's designed to sustain 90 minutes of infectiously silly non sequiturs and sight gags.
Full Review | Apr 23, 2018
Jonathan Rosenbaum Chicago Reader
The plot combines the rock musical with the spy thriller (not to mention assorted other genres), and the comic invention is fairly constant.
Full Review | Oct 18, 2011
TV Guide
Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker present a narrative that is hopelessly convoluted, but that, of course, is exactly their intention as they pile joke upon joke, filling their film with inventive sight gags.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Oct 18, 2011
Richard Schickel TIME Magazine
This time, though, the creative group has neglected to build to the kind of giddy, everything-plus-the-kitchen-sink climax that made Airplane! such a memorable exercise in anarchy.
Full Review | Oct 18, 2011