Box Office Emily was a moderate success at the box office in the 1970s, but in the early 1980s it had a revival and did far better, gaining publicity due to a romance between Koo Stark and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Around that time the film was often shown on
HBO and other
cable TV channels.
Critical reception The critics did not like the script.
Alan Brien wrote in
The Observer that Neame and Herbert should have been less tame with a scene in the drawing room, as censorship had been relaxed and the sexuality could have been more explicit. For
Kenneth Tynan,
Emily "failed to get to first base" in his realm of eroticism. In their book
Great Houses of England & Wales (1994),
Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd and
Christopher Simon Sykes later wrote: "The present Lord Pembroke is (as Henry Herbert) a film and television director, best known for the Civil War drama series
By the Sword Divided and for
Emily, starring Miss Koo Stark." The historian
Simon Sebag Montefiore went to see the film while at school, expecting a skin flick, thanks to sensational press coverage, and later described it as "one of the biggest disappointments of my adolescence".
Certification In 1983, the film was rejected by the
British Board of Film Classification because of a scene showing two women embracing in a shower.
Aftermath The film's leading lady, Koo Stark, suffered in later years from press misrepresentation. In a libel action in 2007, she won an apology and substantial damages from
Zoo Weekly, which had described her as a porn star. She commented "I am relieved that my name has been cleared of this false, highly damaging and serious allegation." In June 2019 Stark again won damages for libel in an action against
Viacom, whose
MTV company had referred to her in the same terms. ==Notes==