Reviews of the film were generally mixed. The
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 56%, based on 41 critical reviews with an average rating of 5.9/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "It fails to challenge the well-established conventions of its storyline, but
Cemetery Junction benefits from the genuine warmth of its script, as well as its refusal to give in to cheap nostalgia."
Total Film magazine giving it four out of five stars and calling it "the most confident British debut since
Shallow Grave".
Time Out magazine gave the film three stars and said it was "refreshing to see a mainstream British film with the ambition to strut its stuff on studio terms". Adam Smith of the
Radio Times commented that "it's deftly written, unobtrusively directed and nicely acted" and also gave it three stars.
OK! appreciated the "sweet characters and good actors" and also liked "the vintage look of the film" and the "great supporting cast". The
Daily Mirror gave the film a very positive review awarding it four stars and saying; "The film is no simple-minded laugh-fest, but rather an astute, amusing and engaging coming-of-age tale with a killer soundtrack of 1970s classics".
Uncut called it a "passable, mildly diverting, coming-of-age Brit-flick". Andrew Barker of
Variety wrote, "It's a strange hybrid of a film, boasting loudmouth boorishness instead of wit, and fortune-cookie schmaltz instead of heart."
Peter Bradshaw reviewed the film for
The Guardian and concluded that the film "is entertaining as far as it goes, but it would have to be fully and Gervaisishly funny, or else fully nasty, vinegary and sad before everyone involved was, to coin a phrase, up the junction."
Box office The film's opening weekend receipts were £641,218. By the end of its theatrical run in the UK, the film had taken in £1,329,002. The film grossed $2.32 million worldwide.
Accolades ==Home media==