The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This attempt to repeat the success formula of ''A Hard Day's Night'' without the Beatles and without
Dick Lester's lively up-to-the-minute direction, doesn't come off – despite speeded-up photography, silent film titles and the forced exuberance of Gerry and the Pacemakers playing and singing anywhere and everywhere from a stately home to a toilet-fittings warehouse. In the competition finale, this group sound, and look, like conservative classicists by comparison with some of their uninhibitedly moronic rivals – not that much can be heard, at this juncture, above the screaming hysteria of the adolescent audience." Eugene Archer of
The New York Times wrote: "In
Ferry Cross the Mersey, the British pop rock group known as Gerry and the Pacemakers have made an unabashed imitation of the Beatles. They could have done a lot worse. The modest musical comedy... tries to compensate in vigor for its lack of originality in following ''A Hard Day's Night''. Chasing the quartet of Liverpool lads through the predictable mobs of screaming adolescents, the director, Jeremy Summers, makes a big thing of the fast action camera. Using the device that gave the long-haired nonconformists a high point in a five-minute play period, he shows the willing Gerry Marsden hopping out of bed, dressing, brushing his teeth and rushing off at a record-breaking pace. ... It is mildly funny – but we have seen it all before. There, of course, is the problem. The Beatle movie was fresh and unconventional, and it had a point – a highly sophisticated one, too. The only point in the new effort is slavish dedication to the principle of past success.This includes the musicians as well as the filmmakers. Their opening number, something about "All Right, All Right, All Right," is, well, all right, but most of the songs are standard copies of better beats."
BoxOffice wrote: "Produced by Michael Holden, the screenplay by David Franden has a stronger plot than the Beatles' film, being based partly on Gerry Marsden's success story, but will have less appeal except to the younger fans, especially those who collect their recordings. The title also means little in the U.S. referring to the daily ferry ride across Liverpool's Mersey River. However, director Jeremy Summers maintains a lively pace throughout with time out for a few songs, considerable horseplay by Marsden and his three colleagues, just a dash of romance and a whirlwind chase climax, complete with what looks like the old Keystone Kops, a sequence that any age group will howl at. The best-known British player, Mona Washbourne ... has a warm, human quality as Gerry's motherly Aunt Lil and Gerry does a good job of playing himself."
Variety wrote: "The Mersey Sound which put pop music on the map in this country gets a fair belting in this modest, routine picture designed to exploit Gerry and the Pacemakers, one of Britain's top pop groups. ... It is noisy, corny and full of cliches but Jeremy Summers has directed with zest and some vitality and the pic goes at a reasonable lick. ... Gerry Marsden, as well as writing the songs, leads his group with ebulience but shows little sign of being an actor. As his rich girl friend Julie Samuel makes her debut. She is a pretty, young blonde, but her inexperience also shows up starkly. Jimmy Savile, a zany disk jockey, appears as himself, as does Cilla Black, a top British thrush, who sings one song and utters a few lines with a pallid personality and dubious success. T. P. McKenna scores as the manager and Mona Washbourne, Eric Barker, Deryck Guyler, Patricia Lawrence and George A. Cooper bring a little of their professional expertise to bear on unrewarding roles. Most of the humor is naive in the extreme but director Summers gives the events as much pep as possible and has extracted some good fun from the frantic car chase sequences." A reviewer from
The Daily Cinema also saw similarities between the two films but found
Ferry to be a "winner". They praised the humour, "exuberant personalities" of the band, and the soundtrack. ==References==