Crimes and Misdemeanors

Reception

Box office

The film grossed a domestic total of $18,254,702.[2]

Critical response

Crimes and Misdemeanors received mostly positive reviews. It holds a 92% rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, based on 50 critics, with an average rating of 7.9/10.[9] It holds a 77/100 weighted average score on Metacritic, based on 10 critics.[10]

Vincent Canby of The New York Times lauded the film, remarking:

The wonder of Crimes and Misdemeanors is the facility with which Mr. Allen deals with so many interlocking stories of so many differing tones and voices. The film cuts back and forth between parallel incidents and between present and past with the effortlessness of a hip, contemporary Aesop. The movie's secret strength—its structure, really—comes from the truth of the dozens and dozens of particular details through which it arrives at its own very hesitant, not especially comforting, very moving generality."[11]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four out of four, writing:

The movie generates the best kind of suspense, because it's not about what will happen to people—it's about what decisions they will reach. We have the same information they have. What would we do? How far would we go to protect our happiness and reputation? How selfish would we be? Is our comfort worth more than another person's life? Allen does not evade this question, and his answer seems to be, yes, for some people, it would be.[12]

Though normally a fierce critic of Allen's work, John Simon of National Review declared the film to be "Allen's first successful blending of drama and comedy, plot and subplot", and added:

The chief strength of the movie is its courage in confronting grave and painful questions of the kind the American cinema has been doing its damnedest to avoid.[13]

Variety gave the film a more mixed review, however, writing, "Woody Allen ambitiously mixes his two favoured strains of cinema, melodrama and comedy, with mixed results in Crimes and Misdemeanours."[14]

Accolades

The film was nominated for three Academy Awards: Allen for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, and Martin Landau for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.

In Empire magazine's 2008 poll of "The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time", Crimes and Misdemeanors was ranked number 267.[15] In 2010, it was the first film to win the 20/20 Award[16] for Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay (Allen), and Best Supporting Actor (Landau). It also received three additional nominations, for Best Director (Woody Allen), Best Supporting Actor (Jerry Orbach) and Best Supporting Actress (Huston). In a 2016 Time Out contributors' poll, it ranked second only to Annie Hall among Allen's efforts, with Dave Calhoun praising it as "the film in which Woody's comic and serious sides most comfortably align".[17] The film achieved the same rank in a 2016 article by The Daily Telegraph critics Robbie Collin and Tim Robey, who wrote, "Here [Allen is] thinking deeply about moral choice, the question of whether guilt in your own eyes or the eyes of the world matters more. This bubblingly wise film, rich with beautifully dovetailing metaphors about blindness and conscience and the perils of self-knowledge, [...] is Allen on soaring form, gliding so elegantly through its maze of ideas it's as if the spirit of Fred Astaire gave it lift-off."[18] Crimes and Misdemeanors was also named Allen's second best by Chris Nashawaty of Entertainment Weekly[19] and Barbara VanDenbergh of The Arizona Republic,[20] third by Darian Lusk of CBS News,[21] and fourth by Zachary Wigon of Nerve.[22] In a 2015 BBC critics' poll, it was voted the 57th greatest American film ever made.[23]

In October 2013, the film was voted by The Guardian readers as the third best film directed by Allen.[24]

Year Award Category Nominated work Result
1989 Academy Awards Best Director Woody Allen Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Martin Landau Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Woody Allen Nominated
1989 Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Crimes and Misdemeanors Nominated
1990 British Academy Film Awards Best Film Robert Greenhut Woody Allen Nominated
Best Director Woody Allen Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Alan Alda Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Anjelica Huston Nominated
Best Film Editing Susan E. Morse Nominated
1990 Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directing - Motion Pictures Woody Allen Nominated
1990 Writers Guild of America Awards Outstanding Original Screenplay Won
1989 National Board of Review Top 10 Films Crimes and Misdemeanors Won
Best Supporting Actor Alan Alda Won
1989 New York Film Critics Circle Best Supporting Actor Won
1989 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actor Martin Landau Nominated

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