Howard Thompson reviewed the television movie for
The New York Times. He noted that "as a TV drama, it has a good cast, an astute director in Davey Marlin-Jones, and an authenticity of background.... the action is cluttered with a confusion of bits and pieces and even scenes that jump to the past and the future.... Mr. Marlin-Jones, with the plot edging forward, handles some scenes beautifully as in one gossipy exchange between two uneasy women, Sarah Cummingham and Helen Stenborg." Reviewing an October 1981 production of the play at the New Ehrlich Theater, Boston Center for the Arts, Carolyn Clay of
The Boston Phoenix wrote that "Underneath the oft-false folksiness of small-town life, Wilson opines, lurk sex and violence. Of course, anyone could turn these pulpy ingredients into a play. Probably only Wilson, immersed in his
Tennessee Williams period, could turn them into an elegiac jigsaw puzzle more reminiscent of
Under Milk Wood than
Tobacco Road." ... "The style Wilson employs in
The Rimers of Eldritch used, if memory serves, to be called 'heightened realism.' As in
Our Town, there is minimal scenery, and the whole town is on stage. But if
Thornton Wilder's play is the rock of Americana, Wilson's explores what's crawling underneath." ==References==