The Curse of the Jade Scorpion grossed $7.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $11.4 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $18.9 million, against a production budget of $33 million. In the United States and Canada, the film debuted at number 11 on its opening weekend, grossing $2.4 million from 903 theaters. It was released on August 10, 2001, making it one of the last films set in
Manhattan to be released before the
September 11 terrorist attacks. Allen was promoting the film around the time of the attacks, and was in New York on September 11. Allen later said he was "terribly shocked but not really surprised" by the attacks, and added in an October 2001 interview that "New York will survive".
Reception The film received mixed reviews from critics. On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 45% based on 123 reviews, with an average rating of 5.2/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "The writing for
Scorpion is not as sharp as Woody Allen's previous movies as most of the jokes fall flat."
Metacritic, which uses a
weighted average, assigned the film a score of 52 out of 100, based on 31 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. Allen himself seems to be in relative agreement with some critics, remarking that it is perhaps his worst movie. Allen has said he felt he let down the rest of the cast by casting himself as the lead. He explained that part of the problem was the period setting and the set building expense which made it too expensive to go back and re-shoot anything. Allen re-shot the entirety of his 1987 drama
September after he felt he got the casting wrong. Allen remarked he offered the role of C.W. Briggs to both
Jack Nicholson and
Tom Hanks, but had to take it when both refused. However, in the years since its release, it began to enjoy a new generation of
cult status comedic recognition.
Roger Ebert wrote, "There are pleasures in the film that have little to do with the story. Its look and feel is uncanny; it's a tribute to a black-and-white era, filmed in color, and yet the colors seem burnished and aged. No noir films were shot in color in the 1940s, but if one had been, it would have looked like this. And great attention is given to the women played by Hunt, Berkley and Theron; they look not so much like the women in classic
film noir as like the women on film noir posters—their costumes and styles elevate them into archetypes. Hunt in particular has fun with a wisecracking dame role that owes something, perhaps, to
Rosalind Russell in
His Girl Friday."
Home media In 2002, the film was released on DVD and VHS by
DreamWorks Home Entertainment. In February 2006,
Viacom (now known as
Paramount Skydance) acquired the rights to all live-action films DreamWorks had released since 1997, following their billion dollar acquisition of the company's live-action assets.
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion was distributed by
Paramount Pictures following the DreamWorks sale. U.K. company WestEnd Films, founded in 2008, later acquired the non-U.S. rights to 11 Woody Allen films in 2010, including
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion. ==Music==