Conservative MP
John Stokes called the film "a deliberate attempt to make fun of and discredit
Prince Charles", accusing it of being based on the prince's 1970 visit to Japan. This was denied by EMI Films. Michael York wrote in his memoirs that Prince Charles "while not confessing the same irresponsible wish-fulfillment as George, confided that our portrayal of the rigors that face a modern prince was, in some respects, accurate. It was certainly not my intention to reflect unflatteringly on a man I admired."
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Despite several winning ingredients – Michael York's ineffably clean-cut performance as the Prince and a commercial gloss most notable for
Henri Decaé's arresting rural compositions –
Seven Nights in Japan never does much to overcome the worst conventions of royal hokum. The fault lies mainly with Lewis Gilbert's attenuation of an underdeveloped script, which fails to tie up its farcical threads or to explore the potentially intriguing tensions of its crosscultural romance. ... The movie's lethargic pace is compounded by a number of self-consciously fussy camera set-ups, and its sentimental tone sealed by the unfortunate songs in English and Japanese foisted on bland newcomer Hidemi Aoki."
Variety wrote: "
Seven Nights in Japan is a beautifully-photographed pastiche bearing little true resemblance to the enigmatic life of bustling Tokyo, where it was lensed. Producer-director Lewis Gilbert has carefully stripped away the coarse fabric which enmeshes any large city and lays bare a delicate situation made credible only by diffused lighting and the inevitability of Christopher Wood's screenplay. ... Charles Gray is well cast as the Ambassador and Eleonore Hirt as his prissy wife. York's acting is suitably princelike although never exceptional while Hidemi Aoki has occasional moments in her first English-speaking role. James Villiers as the pompous ship's officer is wasted in a part which gives him little scope for his not inconsiderable comedy talents." The
Evening Standard called it "a very old fashioned film."
Filmink wrote: "No one liked
Seven Nights in Japan:
Roman Holiday needs gold-plated stars to work and Michael York and Hidemi Aoki were not that."
Box office Gilbert said the film "didn't do anything" commercially and was "hated" in Japan in part because he showed traditional Japan. "We didn't know they hated the idea of Japanese girls going off with foreigners," said Gilbert. ==References==