Originally set for release on
Christmas 2000,
20th Century Fox eventually moved the release of
Moulin Rouge! to Summer 2001 to allow Luhrmann more time in post-production.
Moulin Rouge! premiered at the
2001 Cannes Film Festival on May 9, 2001, as the festival's opening title. In the
United Kingdom,
Moulin Rouge! was the country's number one film for two weeks before being displaced by
A.I. Artificial Intelligence. During its fifth weekend, it reclaimed the number one spot. The film remained so until it was dethroned by
American Pie 2 in its sixth weekend.
Moulin Rouge! has grossed $57,386,369 in the United States and Canada and another $121,813,167 internationally and $3,878,504 in
Australia).
Moulin Rouge! received generally positive reviews from critics.
Roger Ebert rated the film 3.5 stars out of 4, remarking that "the movie is all color and music, sound and motion, kinetic energy, broad strokes, operatic excess."
The New York Times wrote that "the film is undeniably rousing, but there is not a single moment of organic excitement because Mr. Luhrmann is so busy splicing bits from other films" but conceded that "there's nothing else like it, and young audiences, especially girls, will feel as if they had found a movie that was calling them by name."
Moulin Rouge! holds a rating of 66/100 at
Metacritic based on 35 reviews. At
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 75% "Fresh" approval rating based on 259 reviews, with an average score of 7.1/10. The website's critics' consensus reads: "A love-it-or-hate-it experience,
Moulin Rouge is all style, all giddy, over-the-top spectacle. But it's also daring in its vision and wildly original." In December 2001, the film was named the best film of the year by viewers of
Film 2001.
Entertainment Weekly ranked it #6 on its list of the top ten movies of the decade, saying, "Baz Luhrmann's trippy pop culture pastiche from 2001 was an aesthetically arresting ode to poetry, passion, and Elton John. It was so good, we'll forgive him for
Australia." In 2008,
Moulin Rouge! was ranked No. 211 on ''
Empire's'' 500 Greatest Movies of All Time. In 2025, it was one of the films voted for the "Readers' Choice" edition of
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century," finishing at number 130. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.
Home Theater Forum rated the
DVD release of
Moulin Rouge! as the best DVD of 2001. Luhrmann had hand-picked the features and behind-the scenes footage for the two-disc DVD edition.
Analysis Postmodern Scholarly commentators have interpreted
Moulin Rouge! as an exemplary
postmodern film, citing its methods of aesthetic expression, symbolism, and ties to both fine art and pop culture as evidence. The film's music also contributes to its postmodern aesthetic. Notably,
Moulin Rouge! combines mid-to-late 20th Century melodies and lyrics with a narrative set in
fin de siècle France. Scholars Kathryn Conner Bennett and Marsha Kinder have argued that the use of famous popular songs in a new, original context requires audiences to reinterpret their significance within the framework of the narrative and challenge an assumption that music's symbolism is static.
Moulin Rouge! also makes ample use of other postmodern filmmaking techniques, including fragmentation and
juxtaposition. As the film's protagonist, Christian is the primary source of
Moulin Rouge!s story line and many portions of the story are told from his point of view. However, the narrative is fragmented on several occasions when the film deviates from Christian's perspective or integrates a
flashback.
Moulin Rouge! also juxtaposes a play-within-a-film (
Spectacular Spectacular) with the film's events themselves to draw parallels between the plot of the play and the characters' lives. This culminates in the "Come What May" sequence, which reveals the development of Christian and Satine's relationship alongside the progression of
Spectacular Spectaculars rehearsals. Postmodernism is also evident in
Moulin Rouge!s homage to Western musicals, Bollywood
masala films, and
music videos, as well as Luhrmann's film
Strictly Ballroom. ==Accolades==