The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Beginning promisingly with a neat robbery and the criminal changing his petticoats for the safety of trousers, this short story film loses much of its tension by letting the final twist, Carter's blindness, become obvious from the moment he appears on the screen. Donald Wolfit's rather sullen playing does not help this. The colour is pleasant and the use of the wide screen adroit."
Kine Weekly wrote: "Michael Medwin and Donald Wolfit fill the roles of crook and sawbones respectively and subtly amplify the playlet's irony." ''Halliwell's Film and Video Guide'' gives the film no stars, calling it a "modest featurette which scarcely justifies its credits.
David Caute in his study of Losey writes that viewing the film "is a misfortune – its twenty nine minutes weigh like sixty" whose "dialogue and action are equally amateurish, inconsistent, awful. Everything is spelled out, usually several times."
Wheeler Winston Dixon wrote: "Immaculately photographed by
Wilkie Cooper, this peculiar and atmospheric caper film ... offers an interesting hint as to Losey's future direction in British cinema." ==See also==