The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "It is a sad fact that since setting up headquarters in England, the Stone team seems to have lost most of its freshness and technical audacity. This new film harks back in some ways to the
Ealing comedies (Lionel Jeffries plays four bizarre roles, rather well backed by a host of wacky minor characters), but it is essentially a one-joke idea, and the three glamorous leading ladies who are never quite what they seem wouldn't have fooled anyone. Although its full potential is not worked out, the third story has its moments, notably Shirley Jones stopping in mid-conversation to sing the Guandurian national anthem, and some comic business in a theatre involving an ill-rehearsed flying ballet. As is customary with the Stones, almost everything is shot on location (this time in a variety of luscious baronial halls), but the treatment is very anonymous: the sooner they get back to forest fires and train wrecks the better." British film critic
Leslie Halliwell said: "Flabby portmanteau comedy full of in-jokes and flat-footed farce; satire is not evident."
The New York Times described the film as a "lengthy, busy but largely unfunny mélange of comedy and melodrama."
Filmink called it "one of several films post-
Zulu that failed to turn James Booth into a star."
Sky Movies wrote that the film was a "pleasing comedy", and noted, "Lionel Jeffries does a mini-
Alec Guinness by playing four parts."
The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "Yet another in the seemingly endless parade of lacklustre British comedies, this features James Booth as a naive, garrulous mother's boy who starts the film as a PCand ends up unwittingly helping to overthrow a foreign dictator, becoming a hero in the process. The film owes much to
Voltaire's
Candide but it's just not very funny, though Booth is worth watching, and Lionel Jeffries gets to play four roles." ==References==