Alternative versions In the US version, there were several minor changes to the dialogue. "
Rissole" was changed to "
meatloaf", "
two-stroke" was changed to "
diesel", references to the Australian TV show ''
Hey Hey It's Saturday were changed to the more generic Funniest Home Videos'' (which existed in both markets), and brand names of various cars in the driveway were changed from uniquely Australian cars like the
Camira to ones sold in both countries like the
Corolla. Australian broadcasts for "
before-8:30pm screening" have profanity either removed or, where possible, masked by aircraft noises or redubbed when lip movements are not visible. When shown after 8:30pm, all explicit language is intact.
Box office The Castle previewed on 34 screens in Australia and grossed A$122,256 ranking 14th at the Australian box office for the week. It officially opened on 10 April 1997 on 86 screens and grossed A$1,137,703 for the week, ranking fourth. Its per-screen average of A$13,229 was second only just behind the opening of the special edition of
The Empire Strikes Back. It became one of the
top-10-grossing Australian films of all time with a gross of A$10,326,439 at the box office in Australia, over 13 times its A$750,000 budget.
Paramount Pictures bought distribution rights to the United Kingdom and South Africa, and was also offered North American distribution rights, which it refused to buy. A bidding war for North American rights took place, with
Gramercy Pictures,
Miramax Films, and
LIVE Entertainment being the frontrunners and
Columbia TriStar also expressing interest in buying the rights. Ultimately, North American rights were bought by Miramax for a rumoured $6 million. The film grossed $877,621 in the United States and Canada.
Critical reception In Australia, the film received critical acclaim, is considered an iconic classic, and is frequently listed as one of the greatest Australian films ever made. In 2011,
Time Out London named it the 25th-greatest comedy film of all time. The film is a text studied in secondary education in Australia.
The Castle received positive reviews from overseas critics. It has an 87% approval rating from the review-aggregation website
Rotten Tomatoes, based on 38 reviews, with a
weighted average of 7.10/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Home is where the heart is in
The Castle, a rousing Australian comedy that gives audiences an endearing family to root for."
Roger Ebert gave the film 3 stars out of 4, calling it "one of those comic treasures like
The Full Monty and
Waking Ned Devine that shows its characters in the full bloom of glorious eccentricity". Elsewhere around the world, especially in non-English-speaking countries not familiar with Australian humour,
mores or issues, the film made little impact.
Accolades ==Home media==