Critical reception The film surprised critics when it was first released, earning near-universal acclaim, and it went on to be nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Picture. Writing in
Time Out New York regarding the implications of the film
Andrew Johnston stated: "
Monty is much less ribald than it sounds. The funniest moments are frequently the most subtle, like when five of the strippers, standing in the dole line, find themselves unable to resist dancing in place when Donna Summers's "Hot Stuff" comes on the radio. There's surprisingly little raunch, in part because the film can't stop thinking of women as enemies of a sort (at least
Monty is less offensive than
Brassed Off in that department). And refreshingly, its definition of male bonding is broad enough to let two of the lads find love in each other's arms." Review aggregate
Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively reports that 96% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 55 reviews, with an average score of 7.50/10. The consensus reads, "Cheeky and infectiously good-natured,
The Full Monty bares its big beating heart with a sly dose of ribald comedy." On
Metacritic, which assesses films with a score out of 100, the film has a score of 75 based on 31 critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Box office The Full Monty opened on six screens in the United States on 13 August 1997 and grossed $244,375 in its first five days, with a per-screen average in its opening weekend of $29,430; the highest for a film that weekend. When the film was released in the United Kingdom on 29 August 1997 on 224 screens, it grossed £1,593,928 in its first 3 days, ranking second at the UK box office behind
Men in Black, which grossed £1.7 million in its fifth week of release from almost twice the number of screens (411). However, it beat
Men in Black for the week and took the weekend crown the following weekend and remained
number one at the UK box office for the next nine weeks, the longest a film had remained at number one in the UK. It became the highest-grossing British film of all time in its ninth week of release, surpassing
Four Weddings and a Funeral. It was displaced as the weekend number one by
Face/Off but remained the highest grosser for the week and returned to spend the next two weekends back at number one. It was the highest-grossing film in the UK for thirteen consecutive weeks and eleven weekends. In the US, it expanded to 387 screens on 12 September and grossed $2.9 million for the weekend to finish in fifth place at the box office. It expanded further to 650 screens the following weekend where it retained its fifth place. On 27 January 1998, it surpassed
Jurassic Park to become the
highest-grossing film in the UK and finished with a gross of £52.2 million ($85 million).
Controversy New Zealand playwrights
Anthony McCarten and
Stephen Sinclair filed a £180 million
lawsuit against the producers of
The Full Monty in 1998. They claim that the film blatantly infringed on their play,
Ladies Night, which toured both Britain and New Zealand. Anthony McCarten and Stephen Sinclair created a website containing their play in response to statements from the producers of
The Full Monty that claimed the two productions were not alike. The underlying rights were attributed to co-producer, Paul Bucknor, and the lawsuit was settled out of court; as part of the agreement, the website containing
Ladies Night was shut down. ==Soundtrack==