After just opening on Friday, less than to more than favorable reviews have poured in for the "The Internship." 

According to People, the buddy comedy starring Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson is a bit of a lazy fest. Specifically, they said the "dead-end job cliche" is far from recapturing the modern-day rat pack twosome's "Wedding Crashers" glory.

The guys play Billy and Nick, two watch salesman and lifelong friends who are thrown out to pasture and finagle their way into rejoining the working world as Google interns. Surrounded by tech genuises and super-smart whiz kids, the older pair try to fit in by acting like college frat guys and embracing 80's pop culture. But they have a hard time in the film directed by Shawn Levy, according to IMDB

Vaughn and Jared Stern wrote the script, according to Rotten Tomatoes

Quickly, the "fish out of water" film becomes a 90-minute visual ode to the famous company, touching on the struggle of interns to get a limited amount of jobs. Sounds like a real life story, huh? 

ABC News reported that Vaughn and Wilson are just not that funny, allowing their supporting cast to supply the few- and far-in between laughs. 

Hypable said it was a "disposable" film, but has "enough dopey charm to make it a worthwhile distraction at the movies." 

But there has been an early positive review, too.

Starpulse referred to the film as an "unexpected surprise," bringing a cleverness and wickedly funny appeal on screen. They said that both Vaughn and Wilson's characters were very endearing and easy to fall in love with while watching.

Twentieth Century Fox and New Regency's PG-13 comedy opened nationwide on Friday at number two behind "The Purge," making $7 million, according to Deadline.      

Check out the trailer below!