The film did well at the box office and, according to
Box Office India, was among the ten highest-grossing Indian films of 1951. Its success consolidated Nutan's position as a rising star.
The Tribune wrote in a piece about Nutan's career, "Nutan projected the emotions of a tuberculosis patient so realistically that she went on to win laurels." Author
Meghnad Desai described it as a "film about the problems faced by a lower middle class family", noting the acting of Nutan and Sahni, and calling it "a conscious criticism of how ordinary people were oppressed in their daily struggle against forces of power and wealth". Bunny Reuben praised it as "a strong, bold and outspoken film". Author and biographer
T. J. S. George wrote, "Zia Sarhadi's
Humlog (1951) about the frustrations of the middle class was rendered sensitively by an inspired Balraj Sahni and a convincingly consumptive Nutan."
Hum Log went on to form part of Sarhadi's trilogy of films made in the 1950s, along with
Footpath (1953) and
Awaaz (1956). ==References==