The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A 'confessional' sex comedy neither startling, erotic or amusing, but none the less well up to the usual level of British witlessness. The jollifications include an attempted seduction with a sausage stuck upright in a plate of mashed potato, a reprise of the duel scene in
Barry Lyndon, and Liz Fraser, a still game veteran of the genre, doing overblown imitations of
Mae West and
Marlene Dietrich." In
The Radio Times Guide to Films David Parkinson gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "Such was the state of British screen comedy in the 1970s that even its stalwarts were reduced to accepting roles as nudie cuties. Indeed, Liz Fraser did nothing but peek-a-boo fluff in the middle of the decade, managing to retain her dignity while all else were losing their clothes."
Time Out wrote: "Amused by 'confessional sex comedies' like
Tudor Gates'
Intimate Games? Then here's your chance to guffaw at another remarkably similar bit of British rubbish. Harley Street psychiatrist listens to the stupefying fantasies of three women patients, and is at last – not surprisingly – driven bonkers by his work. Liz Fraser, a veteran of this sort of nonsense, is allowed to keep her bra on; the other women strip with the usual offhand indifference. No male genitalia, but a superabundance of wilting puns." The film has a 4.2/10 rating on
IMDb. ==References==