On February 28, 1933, Paramount previews
Murders in the Zoo at the
Alexander Theatre in Glendale. The preview version of the film ran for 65 minutes while the final release ran at 61 minutes. Several censors from New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ontario, and the United Kingdom requested censorship between March 10 and March 23, ranging from requests to remove scenes of a man's mouth sewn together to scenes of a woman being thrown into the alligator pond. The film was banned in Germany, Sweden and Latvia. While Quebec and Australia initially banned the film, it later passed with a variety of cuts.
Murders in the Zoo was distributed theatrically by Paramount Productions, Inc. on March 31, 1933, where it opened in New York at Broadway's Paramount Theatre. For its first six days at the Paramount the film took in $18,540. In comparison, the high had been
Finn and Hattie with $85,900 and the low was
Hello, Everybody which took in $15,600. In
Los Angeles, the film grossed $14,000 in its one-week run at the Paramount and $23,000 at Hollywood's Paramount. Film historian Gregory William Mank described the film as "a box office disappointment", while Norbert Lusk wrote in the
Los Angeles Times about the New York Box Office that the film had "pretty good reviews on the whole, but with no enthusiasm wasted. The latter is difficult to understand for horror films go this is more convincing and out of the ordinary than many and provides legitimate thrills... However, in spite of these merits, the cast is not strong in box office names and because of this it may never achieve the success it deserves" Along with
The Mad Ghoul,
The Mad Doctor of Market Street and
The Strange Case of Doctor Rx,
Murders in the Zoo was released on Blu-ray as part of
Scream! Factory's Universal Horror Collection Volume 2 on July 23, 2019, with a commentary track by Gregory William Mank. In 2023 it was released on Blu-ray in the UK as part of a compilation from Eureka Entertainment titled
Creeping Horror, with a commentary track by Kevin Lyons and
Jonathan Rigby. == Reception ==