In a contemporary review for
The New York Times, critic
A. H. Weiler wrote: "In producing 'Please Believe Me,' the powers over at Metro must have been firmly convinced that the paying customers were anxious to view Deborah Kerr being pursued by three swains instead of one, the standard for the course. And, while the race is a mite more complex than the normal, the chuckles and amour distilled from this item ... could have been handled, it seems, by fewer and less noted operatives. For this romantic comedy is much ado about a tissue-thin tale, which, at its best, is only mildly diverting." Critic John L. Scott of the
Los Angeles Times called the film "a flippant comedy" and wrote: "You might call 'Please Believe Me' a comedy of errors. The players are young, the dialogue snappy and the situations verge on the ridiculous." Reviewer William Brogdon of
Variety wrote: "'Please Believe Me' is a wacky, mildly diverting comedy. Pacing is good and the story antics broad enough to account for a good round of chuckles." According to MGM records, the film earned $577,000 in the U.S, and Canada and $192,000 overseas, resulting in a loss of $609,000. ==References==