Critical response Review aggregation website
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 30% based on 132 reviews and an average rating of 4.95/10. The site's consensus reads, "Channing Tatum and Rachel McAdams do their best with what they're given, but
The Vow is too shallow and familiar to satisfy the discriminating date-night filmgoer." On
Metacritic, which assigns a
weighted mean rating to reviews, the film received an
average score of 43 out of 100 based on 28 critics, which indicates "mixed or average reviews." Emma Dibdin from
Total Film gave the film a three-star rating out of five, commenting, "There's an essential sweetness at work here, thanks partly to McAdams and partly to an unusually chaste love story that ultimately keeps melodrama at bay."
Empire critic Helen O'Hara gave the film a three stars rating out of five, also. She found McAdams "excellent" and Tatum "surprisingly heartbreaking" and concluded, "The few weaknesses in the plot can be overlooked as
The Vow makes for a wonderful – if a bit teary – romance that is brilliantly acted."
The Washington Posts Stephanie Merry wrote, "It's a shame things are so black and white because the movie has more promise – and more laughs – than trailers suggest." She added "Tatum, while a bit deficient in the dramatic acting department, delivers some memorable quips. He and McAdams also have chemistry." Giving the film 2.5 stars out of 4,
Roger Ebert from the
Chicago Sun-Times found it "pleasant enough as a date movie, but that's all."
USA Today wrote, "It may appeal to the most rabid fans of tearjerk romances like
The Notebook, but it's a hard-to-swallow, maudlin tale." Betsy Sharkey, a film critic from the
Los Angeles Times wrote, "Despite the sweet story, this is a movie that leaves you wanting more. To care more, to cry more, to love more."
ReelViews'
James Berardinelli was very negative about the film. He wrote, "With its would-be crowd-pleasing contrivances and rote adherence to formula, [this film] offers almost no redeeming characteristics. [...] This is for young women what
Transformers is for young men." He concluded by describing the film as a "heartless, soulless product."
Box office The Vow debuted at #1 in its opening weekend, with $15.4 million on opening day and $41.2 million over the weekend. On the
Valentine's Day, it grossed $11.6 million, breaking
Hitchs record $7.5 million for the highest-grossing mid-week Valentine's Day. That record would be surpassed by
Bob Marley: One Love in 2024 with $14 million. The film also earned around $9.7 million internationally that weekend. On the weekend lasting from February 24–26,
The Vow became the first film of 2012 in North America to cross the $100 million mark, and the third film to cross the $100 million mark worldwide behind
Underworld: Awakening and
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. The film grossed $125 million in North America and $71.1 million in other countries for a worldwide total of $196.1 million. == See also ==