Madonna: Truth or Dare received generally positive reviews. The documentary was one of the most highly-praised films of
1991.
Peter Travers from
Rolling Stone deemed it "the most revealing and outrageously funny piece of
pop demythologizing since
Dont Look Back"; praising its "freshness and snap" but criticizing Madonna's "lost-lamb routine" in the scene when she visits her mother's grave. He concluded his review: "you may not leave
Truth or Dare loving Madonna, but you'll respect her as a force of nature".
Roger Ebert gave it three and a half stars. He wrote that "unlike most
rock documentaries, the real heart of this film is backstage, and the onstage musical segments, while effectively produced, seem obligatory - they're not the reason she wanted to make this film". Ebert was particularly impressed by Madonna's work ethic. Also from
The New York Times, Joe Coscarelli felt that some of the film's best moments were Madonna's interactions with other celebrities.
Louis Virtel from
Paper praised the live footage as "some of Madonna's most exhilarating live work" and "the way the movie incorporates the stories of Madonna's dancers, most of them gay, is one of its richest features".
Slant Magazines Keith Watson called it "less of a concert film than an elaborately constructed exegesis on pop mythmaking and the construction of identity", awarding it three stars. Noel Murray from
The A.V. Club praised some of the film's "raunchy" parts; "compared to the increasingly brittle, cautiously patrician Madonna of recent years, it's a kick to see her so playful". Murray also highlighted the scenes in which Madonna talks to her father on the phone and meets an old childhood friend as "the times when we do seem to be seeing the
real 'real' Madonna".
Spectrum Cultures Erica Peplin felt that it "humanizes Madonna like nothing else has".
Owen Gleiberman from
Entertainment Weekly gave it an A− and wrote: "the most daring — and revelatory — aspect of the movie is how candidly it depicts Madonna's symbiotic relationship with her dancers, almost all of whom are gay. [...] She does more than show us the backstage life of a pop star. With inspiring frankness, she reveals the roots of her style". In 2002, the same publication concluded that "[Madonna] gets the role she was born to play". Writing for
The Backlot, Virtel called it "damn rewatchable, [with] legendary concert sequences and nutty celebrity cameos, and simply recalls Madonna at her prime". Similarly,
The Guardians Guy Lodge deemed it an "exhilarating snapshot of the star in her godly, don't-give-a-fuck prime, well before
Kabbalah and
Guy Ritchie [...] the film's concert sequences may be its least interesting material almost by design, yet they capture the brazen, cocksure performance presence that – well ahead of her vocal chops, as she herself admits – made her a phenomenon to begin with".
David Denby from
New York magazine, pointed out that the film "is often lewd, but she's never sexual. [Madonna] offers a public personality that is completely eroticized". Nonetheless, he criticized her for having "virtually, nothing of interest to say [...] because the notion of a private self has long ceased to exist for her [...] She's so much a one-note person that
Truth or Dare, for all its skill, is often a little boring". On a more mixed review,
Ty Burr from
Entertainment Weekly wrote that "even if
Truth or Dare is artfully made and entertaining, it's no less an act for being a good one [...] like everything Madonna has her hand in, the film proclaims style as content". He continued his review: "[Madonna] is so controlling of her public self that when the cameras are whirring she doesn't know how to do 'realistic'", and criticized the cemetery scene for being "awkward and forced". Writing for
Pitchfork, Emma Madden pointed out that "for what should have been a tour documentary, little attention is paid to the world outside of Madonna's dressing and hotel rooms [...] While most music documentaries today don't seem to exist for any other purpose than to say, 'wait, this pop star's a good person, cut them some slack', [
Truth or Dare] makes her look like a straight-up megalomaniac". She concluded her review by referring to the film as "one of the most morally contentious documents of the spoiled, rich white-girl fantasy".
PopMatters Bill Gibron deemed it "hollow and calculated" and Bill Wyman, from the
Chicago Reader, panned it as "the most baldly manipulative and scarily dishonest piece of propaganda to be recorded on celluloid since at least the
Reagan campaign's '
Morning in America' commercials and possibly since
Triumph of the Will", and called it "Madonna's
big lie". At the
12th Golden Raspberry Awards, Madonna was nominated for
Worst Actress, but lost to
Sean Young for
A Kiss Before Dying. At the 1992 Homer Awards, organized by the
Video Software Dealers Association,
Truth or Dare won in the category of Best Documentary. == Lawsuit ==