The film was considered a box office disappointment for Warner Bros, though it did receive some positive reviews. In Vanity Fair,
Helen Brown Norden commented, "There is a certain serious fidelity about the picture which makes it ring true. For almost the first time, you see a group of actors pretending to be farmers, and they actually manage to make it seem credible. You feel they know how to pitch hay and how to churn butter. Perhaps that should count for something." The reviewer for the
New York Sun was respectful and complimentary: "This studio [warner Brothers], more used to the quick tempo and hard rhythms of melodrama, has done a simple, honest job of work with the...new film. It is, especially for city dwellers hungry for a taste of the real country in the spring of the year, a picture to be seen and enjoyed. All the qualities of Mrs. Carroll's novel are in the picture." ==References==