Mistress Pamela is a 1973 British sex comedy drama film directed by Jim O'Connolly and starring Ann Michelle, Dudley Foster, Anna Quayle and Anthony Sharp. It was written by O'Connolly loosely based on the 1740 novel Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded by Samuel Richardson.
The Boston Globe wrote: "Producer-director-screenwriter Jim O'Connolly has promoted his movie (in its American premiere here) as another Tom Jones. It's not – in part because the material itself is more confined than Henry Fielding's sprawling tapestry of country life, in part because O'Connolly's treatment is unambitious. He has ground out a straightforward 90-minute narrative, decorated at the dull spots with melodramatic score, straight-into-the-camera asides, and partial blackout of the concupiscence over which he scrawls, "We're being censored!!" He seems willing to sacrifice both stylistic consistency and substance for a momentary laugh."
Boxoffice Pro wrote: "'The two principals, along with Anna Quayle, as the housekeeper romantically attached to the young girl herself, make of the adaptation of the Samuel Richardson classic novel a joy to behold, and something that will remind the more discerning American moviegoer of the calibre of Tom Jones."
Time Out wrote, "Richardson's 18th century classic Pamela clearly dredged up for its bawdy possibilities ... About all the film has in common with the original is a notable lack of humour."
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