Film critic
Parker Tyler said he doubted if the film made any real money, and thought the film was "too lightly tossed aside by moviegoers." He opined that "it is an authentic work of the gay canon, high in homo echelons." He went on to say that the gay community "should take legitimate joy in it, regretting only that more beaver nudity is not present." Author Richard Barrios wrote "this was a tacky, R-rated romp, the kind made for drive-ins as soon as it was okay to show breasts and say a few dirty words." He also observed that "you don't dig for diamonds in a salt mine, and you don't expect class or insight with something like this film." David-Alex Nahmod wrote in the
Bay Area Reporter, "this awful film is a prime example of how far we've come; a cheaply produced, poorly written and directed farce, this movie makes us the butt of some truly tasteless jokes." He also questioned who this movie was "intended for; it's offensive to gays, and surely wouldn't interest straights; just who were the producers trying to reach?" Author Emily Hobson argued that the "majority of those who declared themselves homosexual before draft boards were indeed gay or bisexual, so this film misrepresented 'homosexual draft resistance' to play it for laughs." She further commented that "nonetheless, the film hinted at mainstream awareness of a more radical truth: activists were remaking gay identity by coming out against the war."
The New York Times film critic
A. H. Weiler said the movie "which struggles with the comparatively new movie twist of feigned homosexuality as a draft dodging gimmick, is, unfortunately, neither gay nor deceptive." He further criticized the movie by commenting that it is a "decidedly juvenile caper" ... and it is "neither funny nor serious." Film critic
Kevin Thomas said the film "is a hilarious yet surprisingly inoffensive comedy." He also observed that there are plenty of mishaps with the fake gay couple, "yet never once is the humor cruel; indeed, the picture has been so shrewdly and amiably written that not only homosexuals but also hawks are not likely to be turned off." Richard Simon of
The Sacramento Union had harsh words for the movie, saying; "there are not many films that are so painful that I am unable to sit through them, but
Gay Deceivers is one of them." Likewise, Stanley Eichelbaum of
The San Francisco Examiner was not impressed with the film either, writing; "it's poorly made and ineptly written; the humor is crude and strained, and the one joke plot is so fagged out after 15 minutes that the viewer suffers more embarrassment than the phony faggots." ==See also==