From 1949 to 1972, Lewis was known primarily for
slapstick and
sight gag comedy. Although he stated the film was a drama, there was a perception he would make irreverent humor from serious and horrific events. This production, ten years before his first major dramatic film role in
The King of Comedy, persuaded some that he was unsuited to the role. However, that did not prevent filmmaker
Jean-Luc Godard from saying in an interview with
Dick Cavett, "it is a great idea", "a beautiful idea", and that Lewis "should be supported" in his efforts. In the June 2001
Spin article "Always Leave 'Em Laughing", author Bowman Hastie writes of
Life Is Beautiful and
Jakob the Liar, similar themed Holocaust films released twenty-plus years after Lewis'
The Day the Clown Cried, "All three movies shamelessly use the Holocaust — and the impending death of children — as a vehicle for the star's most base, maudlin ideas about his own beneficent selflessness and humanity. But only Lewis has been vilified for it." In the same article, comedian
Janeane Garofalo provided a hint to another issue that has dogged Lewis' production: ridicule. An often polarizing figure, Lewis had detractors. Garofalo said, "Lewis's public criticism of younger comics ... only fuels
Clown obsessives." Public readings of the script at comedy venues, halted by a
cease and desist order (not by Lewis), provided opportunities to mock, as well as four decades of jokes and relentless interrogation of Lewis, shaped a perverse perception of the film. On July 18, 2012, French director
Xavier Giannoli stated on the
France Inter film show
Pendant les travaux, le cinéma reste ouvert that he had managed to track down a 75-minute copy of the film and that he had shown it to a number of people, among whom was French film critic
Jean-Michel Frodon. In 2013, Frodon published a text dedicated to the film titled "Jerry Made his Day" in the anthology
The Last Laugh. Strange Humors of Cinema edited by
Murray Pomerance. The French version of the same text, titled "Le Jour de Jerry, et la nuit", was later published in the film journal
Trafic. In an interview published in 2017, Frodon claimed to have seen a copy of the film in 2004 or 2005 owned by Giannoli. Frodon did not know how Giannoli obtained his copy and Giannoli declined a request for comment. Frodon reported that while the copy he watched was obviously a rough preliminary edit, it generally followed the published script and did not seem to be missing any major story elements. His experience viewing the film is as follows, Frodon further denies there is any sentimentality in the film, calling it "very meaningful" and stating Lewis is "not indulging himself, he is self-caricaturing. He is playing a very unsympathetic character. He's selfish and totally stupid. ... The film finds what I consider a cinematic answer to some real, serious issues, using a kind of stylized setting, both in the costumes and the sets. It's not pretending to be realistic. Instead, it has a very obvious fairy-tale feeling—not fairy tale, but tale. ... There are details like in the
Grimm Brothers." and "For me, one of the many elements that draw such negative reaction to the film in the U.S. is that this performance is very far from what is expected from him." It was one of the earliest mainstream films to deal with the Holocaust and to directly depict the Nazi concentration camps. ==Lewis interviews and responses==