Your Company
 

Victor/Victoria

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, United States · 1982
Rated PG · 2h 14m
Director Blake Edwards
Starring Julie Andrews, James Garner, Robert Preston, Lesley Ann Warren
Genre Comedy, Music, Romance

A struggling female soprano finds work playing a female impersonator on the cabaret circuit, but it complicates her personal life when American night club operator James Gardner falls in love with her, correctly deducing that she is really a woman in disguise. A careening musical screwball comedy where the soprano tries to maintain her charade.

Stream Victor/Victoria

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

70

Washington Post by

It is, in sum, a sweet film, with the light- hearted theme of we-are-all-pretending-to- be-something-we're-not, and it's only gently naughty. [2 Apr 1982, p.11]

100

Chicago Reader by Dave Kehr

Blake Edwards's 1982 sex comedy has the most beautiful range of tones of any American film of its period: it is a work of dry wit, high slapstick, black despair, romantic warmth, and penetrating intelligence.

80

Newsweek by David Ansen

Take this classical-farce premise, put it in the very accomplished hands of the neoclassical director Blake Edwards, and you have yourself a real comedy -not a mere grab bag of gags but a deliciously accelerating divertissement on the theme of role-playing, sexual and otherwise. [22 March 1982, p.84]

60

Empire by David Parkinson

Edwards and Andrews insisted on using the picture to drive another nail into her detested Mary Poppins image.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Because they all seem to be people first and genders second, they see the humor in their bewildering situation as quickly as anyone, and their cheerful ability to rise to a series of implausible occasions makes Victor/Victoria not only a funny movie, but, unexpectedly, a warm and friendly one.

100

The New York Times by Vincent Canby

It stars Julie Andrews, Robert Preston and James Garner, each giving the performance of his and her career in a marvelous fable about mistaken identity, sexual roleplaying, love, innocence and sight gags, including one that illustrates the dangers of balancing yourself on a champagne bottle on one finger within the range of a singing voice that shatters glass.

Users who liked this film also liked