Critical response John J. O'Connor of
The New York Times praised Fawcett's performance as "admirably strong," also praising the performances by Paul Le Mat, Grace Zabriskie, and James Callahan, concluding that the film "adds up to riveting, sometimes memorable drama." The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazettes Ron Weiskind also praised Fawcett's lead performance, adding that "she is not the only reason
The Burning Bed grabs the viewer's attention and rivets it to the screen. Every aspect of this film has been handled with care." Alan Pergmaent, writing for
The Buffalo News, noted that despite some "haphazard" editing, declared it "one of the most powerful and unpleasant films ever put on the small screen."
Marvin Kitman of
Newsday noted the film's realism but felt it was too extreme, writing: "After awhile,
The Burning Bed plays almost like a videotape of real life. It's raw and depressing... In the end,
The Burning Bed is depressing, not exhilarating, more a videotape of one woman's terrible life experience and newsreel footage of a trial. It is not great art." The
Detroit Free Presss Mike Duffy similarly noted the film's raw presentation of events, but felt it served the subject matter: "It is not a pretty picture. But then, wife-beating is not a pretty subject.
The Burning Bed, however, is a compelling picture. It addresses a serious national misery without resorting to simplistic melodrama or sentimental handwringing." Peter Farrell of
The Sunday Oregonian was unimpressed by the film, describing Rose Leiman Goldember's teleplay as "flat" and describing it as "merely another message movie—timed to coincide with
National Domestic Violence Week." In his 2016 book co-written with
Alan Sepinwall titled
TV (The Book), television critic
Matt Zoller Seitz named
The Burning Bed as the 7th greatest American TV movie of all time, writing, "The film was a landmark in terms of content, depicting domestic violence as an unambiguous horror and a human rights violation". Seitz also praised the performance of Farrah Fawcett as "one of the finest in the history of TV-movies".
Accolades ==References==