Box office Soul Plane opened on May 28, 2004, in 1,566 theaters. In its opening weekend, the film made $5,648,486 in the domestic box office, ranking number five behind
Shrek 2,
The Day After Tomorrow,
Troy, and
Raising Helen. At the end of its run, the film grossed $14,190,750 domestically and $631,596 overseas for a worldwide total of $14,822,346. In an interview on the podcast
WTF with Marc Maron, Hart said that the poor box office turnout was partly due to bootlegging, which had apparently begun three months before the film was released in theaters. He explained, "on the street,
Soul Plane made 40 million dollars". Hart told
Marc Maron that during a premiere, fans were coming up to him asking him to sign copies of the bootleg. Hart does, however, credit
Soul Plane for making him popular enough to start touring around the country.
Critical reception Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale.
Stephen Holden of
The New York Times says in his review: "This hectic farce, which pushes every envelope, is so broad and relentlessly raunchy that it makes a spoof like
Airplane seem as demure as a vintage drawing-room comedy."
The A.V. Clubs
Nathan Rabin criticized the film for having stereotypical characters and humor made up of "desperate half-gags further botched by clumsy camera work and atrocious timing."
Scott Brown of
Entertainment Weekly rated the film a "C−" grade, noting the similarities to
Airplane saying, "The makers of
Soul Plane figured they'd simply reverse the racial polarity and pack a whole movie full of similar material — just not as funny." He concluded that, "If you're looking for comic insights beyond the well-documented ass differential between whites and blacks, well, golly, you ought to try another carrier."
Wesley Morris of
The Boston Globe gave the film credit for delivering a couple funny gags but was offset by "embarrassing bathroom jokes and witless raunch". Despite giving credit to Hart, Hughley and Snoop for their performances, Marc Savlov of
The Austin Chronicle felt that the rest of the film's sophomoric gags "only serves to make the rest of the production that much more humorless in contrast." In late 2014, the film appeared on
Empire magazine's users-voted list of "The 50 Worst Movies Ever", ranking number 47. Its given reason for being listed states: "This was billed as an 'urban' take on
Airplane! That's a bad idea to begin with: like
Scary Movie, parodies of a parody are on to a loser from the start. But with the addition of crude racial stereotyping (of all races) and a fatal lack of funny, this goes from bad to worst. If more voters had seen it, this would be in the top ten." ==References==