Victim premiered at the
Odeon Cinema in
Leicester Square on 31 August 1961, and its US premiere occurred on 5 February 1962 at two theaters in New York. According to an article by
Stephen G. Watts written for
The New York Times, an unnamed Italian critic at the festival commented: "at last the British have stopped being hypocrites".
Box office The film was not a major hit, but it was popular, regarded by
Kinematograph Weekly as a "money maker" at the British box office in 1961. By 1971 it had earned an estimated profit of £51,762.
Critical reception British reviews of the film praised Bogarde's performance as his best and praised his courage in taking on the role. A London magazine called it "the most startlingly outspoken film Britain has ever produced". However, Terence Kelly of
Sight and Sound saw problems with the film, and wrote that
Victim contains "a tour of the more respectable parts of the London homosexual underworld, with glimpses of the ways in which different men cope with or are destroyed by their abnormality", but he did comment that "the film unequivocally condemns the way" blackmail "is encouraged by the present state of the law".
Bosley Crowther wrote that the film "appears more substantial and impressive than its dramatic content justifies" because "it deals with a subject that heretofore has been studiously shied away from or but cautiously hinted at on the commercial screen". He found the script "routine" and "shoddily constructed" as drama, but successful as a political argument: Crowther qualified his praise of Bogarde's acting, saying that "Dirk Bogarde does a strong, forceful, forthright job, with perhaps a little too much melancholy and distress in his attitude, now and again", and summed up his mixed view with the statement: "While the subject is disagreeable, it is not handled distastefully. And while the drama is not exciting, it has a definite intellectual appeal." He elaborated on this further by referring to Kenneth Soddy, a physician in the Department of Psychological Medicine at University College London Hospital, who wrote in 1954 that, while homosexuality itself did not trouble the community, its "social disturbance" during the war caused "variations in social and sexual practices which engenders attacks of acute public anxiety." As such, Waters argues that the film portrays homosexuality in a sensationalised way that would have deliberately drawn public attention to the issue. Before the film was released in the US, a news report in
The New York Times described it as a political work, saying: "the movie is a dramatized condemnation, based on the
Wolfenden Report, of Britain's laws on homosexuality."
Victim became a highly
sociologically significant film, and many believe it played an influential role in liberalising attitudes and the laws in Britain regarding homosexuality. Alan Burton conducted a 2010 study of "various documents relating to the
Wolfenden Report, public opinion, censorship, and the production and reception of
Victim," and found that the film, which "has attracted much criticism and debate, largely in terms of its liberal prescriptions and its 'timid' handling of a controversial theme", had "significant impact on gay men who struggled with their identity and subjectivity at a time when their sexuality was potentially illegal".
Home media The film was released on DVD by
The Criterion Collection in January 2011 as part of their "Eclipse Series" box set "Basil Dearden’s London Underground". It was released on Blu-ray by Network in July 2014. ==Adaptations==