The film was screened in the
Un Certain Regard section at the
2001 Cannes Film Festival. After that screening, it premiered at the 18th Annual Israel Film Festival, where it was reviewed by John Petrakis of the
Chicago Tribune, who wrote: "One of those welcome visitors, a movie that turns out to be much more than we expected".
Late Marriage was positively received by critics.
Metacritic, which calculates a score from zero to 100 from a film's reviews, gave it a score of 82, translating to "Universal acclaim".
Late Marriage placed 88th on
Slant Magazines best films of the 2000s. Ed Gonzalez, a
Slant critic, wrote, "It so boldly confronts stringent cultural traditions it's a minor miracle it never becomes glib".
Late Marriage also got a positive response from critics on
Rotten Tomatoes, where it holds a rank of 88% based on 64 reviews, with an
average ranking of 7.3/10. The site's consensus is: "An observant black comedy about arranged marriages and tradition". Danny Graydon of the
BBC called
Late Marriage "[a]n accomplished and tremendously engaging debut", while
Emanuel Levy called the film "A highlight of Israeli cinema of the past decade". He also hailed Kosashvili's feature debut as "impressive" and "extremely powerful". Edward Guthmann of the
San Francisco Chronicle praised the lead roles portraying
Ashkenazi and Elkabetz groups. According to
Roger Ebert of
Chicago Sun-Times,
Late Marriage "is not a one-level film, and one of its most revealing moments shows the strong-minded mother expressing respect for the equally iron-willed Judith". ==Awards==