The film was released on VHS in 1996, as part of the
Universal Cinema Classics series. In 2003 it was released on DVD in
widescreen format, and later re-released as part of the DVD set
Marlon Brando: The Franchise Collection. It is now on Blu-ray.
Contemporary reviews •
The New York Times review for 17 March 1967 stated: "...if an old fan of Mr. Chaplin's movies could have his charitable way, he would draw the curtain fast on this embarrassment and pretend it never occurred". • American critic
Andrew Sarris, in one of the rare positive reviews of the film, wrote that “[a]ttacks on Chaplin for his sentimentality and/or vulgarity date back almost to the beginning of his career. [...] People who attack
A Countess from Hong Kong in the name of the Chaplin they once allegedly loved have probably forgotten what Chaplin was like in the past. If you ever liked Chaplin, you will probably like
A Countess from Hong Kong. It is the quintessence of everything Chaplin has ever felt.” •
Tim Hunter writing in
The Harvard Crimson for 25 April 1967 gave it a fairly good review, stating: "Take the new Chaplin film on its own terms; contrary to all those patronizing critics, the old man hasn't really lost his touch, and
Countess is a glorious romance". • Pauline Kael for
The New Yorker mentions that Brando was "his worst" in this film.
1990s • Leonard Maltin's
Movie and Video Guide 1995 gave it one-and-a-half stars, stating it was "badly shot, badly timed, badly scored".
21st century • Chaplin biographer
Jeffrey Vance, writing in 2003, maintains: "
A Countess from Hong Kong is less interesting than any of Chaplin's previous sound films because it contains neither political nor satirical elements" (although there is a scene where an old lady renounces a stuffed animal's "red" tongue). Vance believes some of Chaplin's own comic vision and optimism is infused in Sophia Loren's role. A dance-hall girl, Loren's character of Natascha—a prostitute—"perpetuates Chaplin's lifelong fascination with fallen women as heroines. In many ways, Natascha is the proxy for the Tramp in the film, searching for a better life, while always understanding that both happiness and beauty are fleeting. The Tramp's philosophy is expressed by Natascha's dialogue, 'Don't be sad. That's too easy. Be like me. At this moment, I'm very happy...That's all we can ask for—this moment.' This statement can be applied to the film as well: while it is easy to lament its many failures, particularly because it is Chaplin's last film, it is perhaps best to cherish its wonderful, fleeting comic moments." • In 2005, the
Radio Times gave the film two stars, stating that "it's all too staid and too stagey". • In 2012,
TV Guide gave the movie one star, with the comment "a dismal, uninviting comedy". • In 2013,
Christopher Null of Filmcritic.com gave it three stars, stating, however, "the repetitive story (with Loren repeatedly running to hide in Brando's bathroom when there's a knock on the door) gets tiresome". ==References==