The documentary received numerous positive reviews: Steven Rea of
Philadelphia Inquirer wrote "Harvard Beats Yale 29–29 is a comeback story, a classic underdog yarn. But this winning doc also offers serious reflection on how events from our past continue to loom large in our lives - as regrets still counted, as lessons learned, as triumphs that awe and amaze."
J. Hoberman of
Village Voice wrote "This may or may not be the greatest instance of college football ever played, but ''
Brian's Song, Jerry Maguire, and The Longest Yard'' notwithstanding, Rafferty's no-frills annotated replay is the best football movie I've ever seen: A particular day in history becomes a moment out of time."
Mark Feeney of
Boston Globe called the film "terrifically entertaining". Tom Keogh of
Seattle Times called it "a delightful documentary". In greater depth,
Bob Hoover of
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote "Despite his annoying style of lingering a bit too long on his subjects, Rafferty, mainly a TV documentary maker, pries fascinating stories and insights from the now aging players," and
Kenneth Turan of
Los Angeles Times wrote "A look at the legendary Nov. 23, 1968, game, "Harvard Beats Yale" is both an irresistible human story and as fine a documentary on football as "
Hoop Dreams" was on basketball", calling the film "a memorable winner". He further notes that the passage of 40 years allowed a unique perspective as the players spoke about "what was not only the game of their careers but possibly the experience of their lives", and made note of how time led to other celebrity for some of the players, with
Tommy Lee Jones becoming an
Oscar-winning actor,
Brian Dowling becoming the character "B.D." in the
Doonesbury comic strip (
Garry Trudeau attended Yale), and player Bob Levin remembering dating a Vassar undergraduate named
Meryl Streep." ==See also==