Law's slick, pretty-boy reincarnation is less icy and insensitive than Caine's wide-boy original, so we still have all the painfully confused "What's it all about?" soul-searching.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Pretty good as pretty good goes, with Jude Law turning in an efficiently chipper, if palpably less dark, performance than the one that earned Michael Caine his first Oscar nomination.
Caine played Alfie as an incorrigible S.O.B. who at least made for good company. Law makes him a delicate boy with self-control problems who can't stop talking, and his charm runs out long before the film ends.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Alas, this is a remake without a reason. Alfie can no longer shock us.
Charlotte Observer by Lawrence Toppman
Flaccid remake of a tough 1966 original.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
The new Alfie is so irresistible that he hardly requires contempt. Without it, the movie is little more than a feature-length roll in the hay.
Miami Herald by Rene Rodriguez
Such smooth, crisp entertainment, you barely even notice it has nothing new to say.
Dallas Observer by Robert Wilonsky
This new version, which retains nearly every character and echoes nearly every scenario, is somehow its complete opposite--a slight, breezy incarnation that tries like hell to dishearten, which only makes it disingenuous.
A breezy, sexy romp with a conscience that reflects in obvious but interesting ways on societal changes over the intervening 38 years.