Those who thought "Shakespeare In Love" was as good as it gets in intelligent costume romantic comedy will find that director Richard Eyre and writer Jeffrey Hatcher have taken the form to a higher level.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
A film that, despite being about theatre itself, is remarkably cinematic and entirely unafraid to revel in the English language.
It's a marvelous premise, and Crudup's serpentine performance has a venomous grace. But Jeffrey Hatcher's screenplay too often sacrifices psychological insight for bogus theatricality.
Second-rate bawdiness--that is, bawdiness without the wit of Boccaccio or Shakespeare or even Tom Stoppard--is more infantile than funny, and Im not sure that the American playwright Jeffrey Hatcher, who concocted this piece for the stage and then adapted it into a movie, is even second-rate.
This skillfully acted, handsomely crafted frock piece toys cleverly with gender confusion and sexual identity.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
For every thing that Stage Beauty does right, it fumbles at least one other element, resulting in a movie-going experience that is of the glass half-full/half-empty variety.
Village Voice by Jessica Winter
Most frustrating, Stage Beauty fumbles XX/XY politics at every turn.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
A celebration of the theater that tends to drag the moment it's out of drag.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by Peter Rainer
Crudup, whose features have the appropriate delicacy, plays Ned with complete conviction; its difficult to imagine anyone else succeeding as well.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Expertly directed by Richard Eyre (Iris) from Jeffrey Hatcher's play, the film is bawdy fun.