In a contemporary review for
The New York Times, critic
Bosley Crowther wrote: "Stanley Roberts has written and Universal-International has produced a thoroughly congenial family comedy in this iconoclastic little film and Alexander Hall has directed it in a nimble and unpretentious style. And, what's best, Spring Byington plays it with deliciously venturesome bounce, ably and winningly assisted by Charles Coburn and Edmund Gwenn. Apparently what Mr. Roberts had in mind when he wrote this film was the loneliness to which older people who have lost their accustomed mates are prone. Only he didn't let the pathos of the prospect get him down. Rather he let it inspire him to look on the brighter side." ==References==