Leonard Maltin gave the film two out of four stars, writing that while the film "provides a nice lead role for Holly", the cast can't overcome the slight story and the "strong soundtrack overpowers the script."
Roger Ebert, writing for the
Chicago Sun-Times, also gave the film two stars, writing that while the film attempted to elicit sympathy for the characters, he saw them as "boring slugs" whose unhappiness was avoidable and whose lives were uninteresting, deeming the film "thin and unconvincing." He later included the review in his 2000 book,
I Hated, Hated, Hated This Movie. Todd McCarthy of
Variety wrote that the film represented a "watchable but unexciting sidestep" for Burns as a director, citing a lack of complexity and incident, but praised the cinematography and performances. While at the time he described it as "the most personal film I've ever made. The one that's closest to my heart", and decided to return to independent filmmaking: "Now that it bombed and didn't do so well critically, I know never again. I'll only make films the way I want to make them, and I'll live and die by my decisions, not somebody else's." ==References==