Critical response Great Balls of Fire! earned mixed to positive reviews. The review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes reported that 63% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 27 reviews, with an average rating of 5.9/10. The critical consensus reads, "
Great Balls of Fire romanticizes the more disturbing elements of Jerry Lee Lewis' controversial life story, but Dennis Quaid's crackerjack performance and a soundtrack stuffed with classic songs gives this flawed biopic some smolder". On
Metacritic—which assigns a weighted mean score—the film has a score of 49 out of 100 based on 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times, gave the film two stars out of four. He wrote that Quaid did a fine job of reproducing Lewis' stage persona, but lamented how "the script shies away from the dark side of Lewis." He thought it presented "a Jerry Lee Lewis who has been sanitized, popularized and lobotomized." Regarding the portrayal of Lewis' third marriage, the film "plays everything so obliquely that we have little idea of what the girl thinks of Lewis, and no idea of what he thinks of her."
Caryn James of
The New York Times wrote that the film portrays the fun side of rock and roll, writing "Jim McBride's film is a compressed, cleaned-up version of the Jerry Lee Lewis story, but it re-creates the soul-shaking, brain-rattling fun of rock-and-roll. It also captures, perhaps for the first time on film, something of the sexual aura of rock-and-roll at its birth." Yet, she added that anyone looking for a true sense of music history will be let down by the film. Jay Carr of
The Boston Globe thought McBride was "justified in trying to make a film about the way we mythify our public icons", and thought Ryder made the film "special". Yet he wrote that it "never connects with anything that might be called a real feeling, never takes things beyond the merely skin-deep", describing it as "bland, bloated, mainstream, false".
Accolades •
Young Artist Awards: Young Artist Award; Best Young Actress Starring in a Motion Picture, Winona Ryder; 1990.
Box office The film opened on 1,417 screens in the United States on June 30, 1989. The box-office receipts were poor, with the film finishing in seventh place for the weekend with a gross of $3,807,986 and eventually grossing $13,691,550. ==Soundtrack==