Box office Critical reaction to the film was mixed. It nevertheless did extremely well at the box office, helped by the enormous publicity attached to Burton and Taylor's
Cleopatra, which was out on release. In its first week at the Empire Leicester Square, it grossed a house record $30,114. It also set house records in most cinemas in the UK outside London in its first week. In its first week of release, before it had opened in the United States, it had grossed $1,337,000 from 172 theatres in 89 cities of 30 countries. In the United States and Canada, it grossed $15 million, on a budget of $4 million. It had admissions of 765,804 in France.
Critical Alexander Walker of London's
Evening Standard was critical of the film, and said: "It is an entire British museum of prehistoric cliches and burial mound characters."
Bosley Crowther of
The New York Times praised
The V.I.P.s as "a lively, engrossing romantic film cut to the always serviceable pattern of the old multi-character
Grand Hotel, and some of the other people in it are even more exciting than the top two stars. Louis Jourdan, for instance."
Variety called it "a smooth and cunning brew with most of the ingredients demanded of popular screen entertainment. It has suspense, conflict, romance, comedy and drama ... Its main fault is that some of the characters and by-plots are not developed enough though they and their problems are interesting enough to warrant separate pix. But that is a risk inevitable in any film in which a number of strangers are flung together, each with problems and linked by single circumstance." Philip K. Scheuer of the
Los Angeles Times wrote: "They can say it's in the tradition of MGM's
Grand Hotel and
Dinner at Eight all they want; to me it's a grounded
High and Mighty. And I do mean grounded—not only at London airport, but in the writing, directing, and some of the acting as well." Richard L. Coe of
The Washington Post called it "very good fun—sleek, adroit and enjoyable."
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "
The V.I.P.s is a pretty little cinematic souffle that melts in the mind, but its flavour is spicy and sweet." The team of Asquith, De Grunwald and Rattigan later produced another
portmanteau film, the dramatic
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964). Robert Murphy disapproved of both films, remarking that "Asquith spent his last years making increasingly banal prestige productions like
The V.I.P.s and
The Yellow Rolls-Royce".
Accolades ==Novelisation==