Box office Husbands and Wives opened on September 18, 1992 in 865 theatres, where it earned $3,520,550 ($4,070 per screen) in its opening weekend. It went on to gross $10.5 million in North America during its theatrical run. The film was also screened at the 1992
Toronto Festival of Festivals.
Critical response Husbands and Wives opened to acclaim from film critics.
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone called it "a defining film for these emotionally embattled times; it's classic Woody Allen."
Todd McCarthy of
Variety similarly praised the film as "a full meal, as it deals with the things of life with intelligence, truthful drama and rueful humor."
Vincent Canby of
The New York Times called it "a very fine, sometimes brutal comedy about a small group of contemporary New Yorkers, each an edgy, self-analyzing achiever who goes through life without much joy, but who finds a certain number of cracked satisfactions along the way." He added, "'Husbands and Wives' -- the entire Allen canon, for that matter -- represents a kind of personal cinema for which there is no precedent in modern American movies. Even our best directors are herd animals. Mr. Allen is a rogue: he travels alone." In 2016,
Time Out contributors ranked
Husbands and Wives fifth among Allen's efforts, with Keith Uhlich praising the work's "trenchant examination of long-term relationships on the downswing". The same year, Robbie Collin and Tim Robey of
The Daily Telegraph listed
Husbands and Wives as his seventh greatest film, calling it "a rapid marvel of four-way characterization" and praising the opening scene as "one of Allen’s most vividly written, shot and acted scenes ever".
Accolades ==References==