Box office By the spring of 1998,
The Sweet Hereafter had grossed $1 million domestically. Although Canadian historian
George Melnyk said the film achieved "mainstream popularity", another Canadian historian,
Reginald C. Stuart, said that the film "aimed for, but did not reach, a mass audience." Dan Webster of
The Spokesman-Review concluded that "despite generally good reviews", the film "never attracted much box-office attention." The
Writers Guild of Canada commented that
The Sweet Hereafter and contemporary Canadian films "never succeeded in scoring a home run at the international box office." Melnyk suggested Egoyan's previous film
Exotica performed better at the box office than
The Sweet Hereafter because of
Exotica "sexual content ... rather than the early film's artistic merit."
Critical reception received critical praise for his performance in the film and won the
Genie Award for
Best Actor.|219x219px On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 91 out of 100, based on 23 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". In 2002, readers of
Playback voted it the greatest Canadian film ever made. In 2004, the
Toronto International Film Festival ranked it third in the
Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time, tied with ''
Goin' Down the Road'', and in 2015, it was the sole film in the third spot.
Roger Ebert gave the film four stars, calling it "one of the best films of the year, an unflinching lament for the human condition."
Janet Maslin, writing for
The New York Times, said "this fusion of Mr. Banks's and Mr. Egoyan's sensibilities stands as a particularly inspired mix", with
Sarah Polley and
Bruce Greenwood "particularly good here". Brendan Kelly of
Variety praised
The Sweet Hereafter as "Egoyan's most ambitious work to date", and as "a rich, complex meditation on the impact of a terrible tragedy on a small town", adding Polley and
Tom McCamus are "excellent".
Entertainment Weekly gave the film an A, saying it "puts you in a rapturous emotional daze", and calling it a "hymn to the agony of loss" and "a new kind of mystical fairy tale, one that seeks to uncover the forces holding the world together, even as they tear it apart." Paul Tatara of
CNN called
The Sweet Hereafter "devastating" and wrote Ian Holm gives "the performance of his hugely impressive career." David Denby of
New York magazine said that the film had "Ian Holm's greatest role in the movies" and the cast are "all excellent". The film made over 250 critics' Top 10 lists for the best films of 1997. In 2001, an industry poll conducted by
Playback named it the best Canadian film of the preceding 15 years. In 2004, Slovenian critic
Slavoj Žižek called
The Sweet Hereafter "arguably film about the impact of trauma on a community." That year,
The New York Times also included the film on its list of "the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made". In 2011, British director
Clio Barnard praised the "real depth" and "healthy ambiguity" of the story and described Holm and Polley as "brilliant", giving "powerful, subtle performances". One year later,
The A.V. Club named
The Sweet Hereafter the 22nd best film of the 1990s, praising it as a "masterpiece of adaptation".
Accolades The Sweet Hereafter won three awards at the
1997 Cannes Film Festival: the
FIPRESCI Prize, the
Grand Prize of the Jury, and the
Prize of the Ecumenical Jury. This was the highest honour won at Cannes for a Canadian film and made Egoyan the first Canadian to win the Grand Prix, followed by
Xavier Dolan with ''
It's Only the End of the World'' in 2016.
The Sweet Hereafter also won Best Motion Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Actor for Holm, and three other prizes, at the
18th Genie Awards. It was nominated for Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay at the
70th Academy Awards, but lost to
Titanic and
L.A. Confidential, respectively. ==Notes==