received positive reviews from critics, with the screenplay and performances gaining the most attention. On 13 September 1957,
Filmfare wrote, "A powerful and vibrantly gripping picture, B. R. Films' is a distinctly successful combination of pertinent social education and moral and top-rate entertainment."
The Times of India called the film "a picture with a purposeful and distinctly impressive theme ... from almost the beginning to the end", saying that it "remains a brilliant, beautiful and very entertaining".
Bombay (present-day Mumbai) newspaper
Bharat Jyoti found the film to be "one of the most ambitious and unusual subjects ventured in India".
Screen said that it was "one of the most important films made in this country" at the time. A critic from the magazine ''Eve's Weekly'' believed that it "truly a Mahatma Gandhi|[Mahatma] Gandhi among films".
Amrita Bazar Patrika saw that Chopra "has delivered a commendable film" with , and found the film "combines ... purposeful and [picturesque] theme[s]". Reviewing it in
Lucknow, the daily
Pioneer described the film as "the straightforward natural drama [that] develops grip as the story unfolds itself and scales the very height of dramatic expression."
The Hindu critic felt that it implied Gandhi's quote, "There is no room for machinery that would displace human labor and concentrate power in a few hands."
Sport and Pastime praised the film for "provides wholesome entertainment with a purpose", stating, " is a picture of which the industry should be proud of."
The Indian Express noted, "What strikes one most in this film is its sense of mission and the remarkable, almost infectious enthusiasm of practically everybody in it ..." == Awards ==