Box office The film was a box office success – according to
Variety it was the fourth highest grossing film in England. and "did extraodinarily well" in 1958.
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A crudely melodramatic film dealing with, but not one feels very gravely concerned about, the real life problem of organised prostitution. There is some rather loose and high flown talk regarding a change in the law and licences for the streetwalkers, but in the main the film has to do with the downfall of a
Graham Greene-style boy gangster, played with appropriate menace by
John Derek. The direction is brisk and there are some lively impersonations by
Vera Day,
Shirley Ann Field and
Patricia Jessel among les girls. Also to be enjoyed is
Harold Lang's droll performance as a jaundiced gang-member"
Variety wrote "It is difficult to know what producer Raymond Stross had in mind with "
The Flesh is Weak ... As a social document, it makes only the mildest impact and fails lamentably to say anything new or penetrating about an urgent problem. As entertainment, it is rather mediocre stuff which likely will bore the discerning patron and sadly disappoint those in search of cheap thrills. ...
Flesh is Weak could have been a searing and courageous exposure of a social sore, but it merely flirts with the subject. By compromise, it, ends up as a sordid, depressing little yarn which Don Chaffey directs competently, but without originality." ==References==