
Critic Reviews
74
Metascore
Generally Favorable
positive
9(75%)
mixed
3(25%)
negative
0(0%)
Showing 12 Critic Reviews
100
The tunes are gold, and as Jane approaches a local creek, resplendent in her gorgeous yellow gown, we get one of the most famous visual gags in the history of the musical.
83
[Day] is dizzyingly kinetic (and funny) as Calamity Jane‘s tomboy cowgirl.
83
Even though the musical aspect does make it at odds with darker cowboy movies, Calamity Jane is still a fitting showcase for one of the genre's best characters.
80
Boisterous fun, with Day’s performance – as the song goes – as busy as a fizzy sarsaparilla.
80
What could be better than watching Doris Day reprise her signature role, whip-cracking away in buckskin as the deadwood stage comes a-rolling in over the hills?
80
Even if the screenwriters were obviously inspired by the mega-success of ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, that doesn't make this funny, rambunctious entertainment a mere rip-off. Whether dancing, singing, or hamming it up as the legendary tomboy, Day proves that she was second only to Judy Garland as the Golden-Age Hollywood Musical's consummate triple threat.
80
Day is on top form as the boastful sharpshooter, but she's ably matched by her supporting cast and the music.
80
Doris Day is at her friendliest and most likable as the tomboy heroine of this big, bouncy Western musical about Jane's romance with Wild Bill Hickok.
70
An elaboration of the concept of Annie Get Your Gun—not to mention Doris Day’s tomboy image in On Moonlight Bay—this 1953 western musical is perhaps best remembered for its Oscar-winning tune “Secret Love”; otherwise there’s Howard Keel as Wild Bill Hickok, direction by David Butler, and all that kinky cross-dressing.
60
The energy of the music and of the supercharged Day just about prevail over the lethargy of Butler's (non-)direction.