Box office According to trade papers, the film was a "notable box office attraction" at British cinemas. According to
The Washington Post it was the 17th most popular film at the British box office in 1946
Kinematograph Weekly reported that the film was a runner-up for "biggest winner" at the box office in 1946 Britain.
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Here is a sincere piece which is still impressive, although it falls short of its promise. Directed largely in the documentary manner and with the help of the Tanganyika Government, its faults spring primarily from a mediocre script and its attempts at concessions to hackneyed film traditions. Tom Morahan is responsible for its excellent colour – alike in the bush scenes and in London. And
Arthur Bliss's music gives the sound-track real distinction. But, apart from Eric Portman's District Commissioner, the acting is patchy, with Robert Adams (Kisengaj showing more conscientiousness than brilliance and Phyllis Calvert (as a woman doctor) definitely ill at ease. Orlando Martins, a newcomer who plays Magole, should be given more opportunities in British films."
Variety wrote: "The characters themselves, flat and uninspired, aren't sufficiently exciting to justify 109 minutes on the screen. Tribal dances, burning of a dispensary by a maddened crowd, blood-letting and puncturing of bodies, swamps and rivers, beating of tom-toms, and all the paraphernalia of the jungle are conventional adjuncts fo a story that doesn't begin to live, but is throughout animated by good intentions."
Leslie Halliwell wrote "Ernest but totally unpersuasive semi-documentary shot in unconvincing sets and garish colour." In
British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 David Quinlan rated the film as "average", writing: "Sincerely told, could do with a bit more guts."
BFI Screenonline said the film was "a creditable effort to tell an African story from the point of view of an African. The story only makes sense if we identify with Kisenga's dilemmas. Only he can resolve a situation in which the African and the European world views are at loggerheads, and he is prepared to give up his life in the struggle. The film gives us unusually authentic-seeming pictures of village life and ritual, and invests the people with a certain dignity and sensibility, even if ultimately they prefer superstition and fear to science. The photography is slow-moving and beautifully composed; African faces appear on screen distinct with emotion and individuality."
Martin Scorsese, an admirer of Dickinson, said: "He didn't make many films, but each is a fascinating project. Even when the movie doesn't work, like
Men of Two Worlds or
The Prime Minister, you're struck by the choice of subject matter, by the vivacity of the film-making, the intelligence of the approach." ==References==