The film was released in 1931.
New York Times film critic
Mordaunt Hall credited the film for its comedy and characterizations of the stars in the movie; however longtime Pickford fans were not used to the loose adult role that the star traded for her earlier ingenuousness and it eventually flopped at the
box office. A copy of
Kiki still exists at the
UCLA Film and Television Archive. It was released on
DVD by Alpha Video on March 1, 2016, the last Mary Pickford talkie to be released. It was the first Mary Pickford film since the formation of
United Artists to lose money. ==References==