In 1958, the film received generally positive reviews from critics in major newspapers and in
trade publications. Most reviewers, including Charles Stinson of the
Los Angeles Times, approached the film in their assessments as an amusing, mildly erotic
parody or spoof, not as a true science-fiction offering or even a faintly-serious space adventure. In his November 13 review, Stinson characterizes the feature as "cheery frivolity" with "well-constructed cheesecake", all of which is visually punctuated by "luscious DeLuxe color". He even compliments Gabor's performance: Marjory Adams, writing for
The Boston Globe, also recognized the Gabor vehicle as a "merry spoof of science fiction" that no one either on the screen or in theater audiences takes seriously, especially with regard to the actors' lines. "The dialogue", notes Adams, "is of the sort which might be written by a high school freshman", adding "the only unexpected twist is [Zsa Zsa] isn't the queen".
Variety, for decades a leading trade publication in covering the United States' entertainment industry, simply deemed
Queen of Outer Space as "a good-natured attempt to put some honest sex into science-fiction." In
Canada in 1958, Mike Helleur, a reviewer for
Toronto's
The Globe and Mail, compares the film's portrayal of life on Venus to "living backstage at the
Folies Bergère", complete with light entertainment and rather scantily clad young women, who in this case take a "slapstick romp" through a Venusian queen's palace. One of several oddities that Helleur notices in the film is Gabor's singular identity among all the planet's inhabitants met by the Earthlings: "She is...the only girl in Outer Space with a Hungarian accent."
"Morally objectionable" The trade publication
Motion Picture Daily reported in 1958 that the
National Legion of Decency objected to the content of
Queen of Outer Space. In its October 3 issue, less than a month after the film's release, the magazine provides a few examples of the Legion's classification system for judging a Hollywood production's level of "decency": ==References==