Box office G.I. Jane in the U.S opened at number one, grossing $11 million in its opening weekend, playing at a total of 1,945 theaters. The film managed to break even with the worldwide box office gross, totalling almost $99 million.
Critical response On
Rotten Tomatoes,
G.I. Jane has an approval rating of 54% based on reviews from 39 critics, with an average rating of 5.7/10. The site's critical consensus was: "Demi Moore admirably does her duty, but
G.I. Janes well-intentioned message is obscured by stylistic bombast and an overload of
jingoism." On
Metacritic, the film has a score of 62 out of 100 based on reviews from 21 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. Audiences surveyed by
CinemaScore gave the film a grade "A−" on scale of A to F.
Todd McCarthy of
Variety called it "A very entertaining get-tough fantasy with political and feminist underpinnings."
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times wrote: "The training sequences are as they have to be: incredible rigors, survived by O'Neil. They are good cinema because Ridley Scott, the director, brings a documentary attention to them, and because Demi Moore, having bitten off a great deal here, proves she can chew it."
Owen Gleiberman of
Entertainment Weekly wrote: "Were women put on earth to be warriors? Demi Moore certainly was. The role of Jordan fits her as snugly as a new layer of muscle." Deborah Brown of
Empire magazine wrote: "In spite of a catalogue of downsides, including clunky dialogue, fuzzy morals and preposterous story lines, G.I. Jane does offer a perverse level of enjoyment." Screenwriter David Twohy later reflected on Demi Moore’s performance, telling Yahoo! Entertainment: "It's the performance of her career. The movie rises or falls on her performance, and that required her to have a total, unflinching commitment to that part. And she had that commitment — I think she f***ing nailed it." He also noted that the film’s critical reception was negatively affected by the release of
Striptease, adding: "She should have been nominated for
G.I. Jane, and I think she would have been, too, if not for
Striptease. That tainted her chances and maybe everyone's chances." Looking back at the film, Moore herself said: "I loved working with Ridley Scott on
G.I. Jane. Probably one of my favorite experiences." She added: "Being of the generation I'm from, I really wanted to find an action-oriented film, and I felt like the response I got was polite, but like I was crazy." In a 2025 interview with Letterboxd, director Ridley Scott praised the film, declaring: “With Demi, we made a very, very good film with
G.I. Jane. I think it is the best pro-women film honestly ever made, even better than
Thelma & Louise. Think about what she does. And not only that—the bad guy’s Anne Bancroft, who assumes you’re going to lose. Are you kidding me?”
Accolades Demi Moore won the
Razzie Award for Worst Actress for her performance in the film. Viggo Mortensen was nominated for Worst Fake Accent at the 1997
Stinkers Bad Movie Awards but lost to
Jon Voight for
Anaconda and
Most Wanted.
Home media G.I. Jane was released on
VHS and
DVD on April 22, 1998. The only extra feature was a
theatrical trailer. It was released on
Blu-ray on April 3, 2007, with no extra features aside from trailers for other movies. The film was also released on
LaserDisc; this release featured an
audio commentary by director Ridley Scott. The film grossed $22,122,300 in rentals. ==See also==