A Place for Lovers opened to generally negative reviews.
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times called it the "most godawful piece of pseudo-romantic slop I've ever seen!" and
Charles Champlin of the
Los Angeles Times referred to it as "the worst movie I have seen all year and possibly since 1926."
Rex Reed wrote that the film "[l]ooks not so much directed as whittled to death."
Time magazine called the film "Woefully inept ... Marcello Mastroianni displays all the zest of a man summoned up for tax evasion. The five scriptwriters who supposedly worked on the film must have spent enough time at the water-cooler to flood a camel." Katherine Caroll's review in the
New York Daily News called the film "about as exciting to watch as a game of
tiddly-winks." Critic
Manny Farber stated that "one of the best laughs is watching Dunaway working on the subject of despair." The film is widely considered among the
worst of all time and was listed in the 1978 book
The Fifty Worst Films of All Time, which called the film "a putrid tearjerker." The Italian edition of
Vanity Fair included it on its list of the 20 worst films. ==See also==