According to the American Film Institute's catalog, production work on the film started on November 14, 1928, a date generally consistent with a November 27 report in
Exhibitors Herald and
Motion Picture World, which announces that Keaton began work on the film "last week." News updates about the film in 1928 trade publications indicate that casting was still being finalized in the latter half of November.
Exhibitors Daily Review announced on November 16: "Dorothy Sebastian has been given the feminine lead opposite Buster Keaton," and on November 23, "Edward Earle is playing the
heavy in Buster Keaton's picture,
Spite Marriage." A week later,
The Distributor, a paper published by MGM's sales department, confirmed that the studio had assigned Leila Hyams a "big part" in "the forthcoming Buster Keaton vehicle" in part due to her "distinct success" as a lead in the studio's recent crime drama
Alias Jimmy Valentine, which had been released just two weeks earlier. The studio publication in the same news item also confirmed that Sydney Jarvis and Hank Mann had joined the cast, although their roles would be uncredited on the screen.
Spite Marriage was released in April 1929, in two editions: a mute print for silent-only theaters, and a "synchronized" version for sound theaters, with the action accompanied by an orchestra score and sound effects. The feature was generally very well received by critics in leading newspapers, by reviewers in the film industry's major trade journals and papers, as well as by moviegoers. The influential critic for
The New York Times, Mordaunt Hall, commented about the audience's response to the comedy in his assessment of the film. He noted that Keaton created "a state of high glee" in the
Capitol Theatre in
Manhattan, where Hall attended the comedy's premiere on March 25, adding that "there were waves of laughter from top to bottom of the house."
Abel Green, the editor and reviewer for
Variety, characterized Keaton's production as "replete with belly laffs" and also described the Capitol's audience being in "hysterics" and "mirthful" while watching it. While Green did express some reservations about what he viewed as several of the film's implausible situations and its "mechanized" structure, he predicted nothing but financial success for the "enjoyable low comedy glorified
slapsticker." In its March 31 review, the paper praised the film and drew special attention to Sebastian's performance:After seeing a preview of
Spite Marriage weeks before its premiere in New York, reviewer Walter R. Greene of the trade journal
Motion Picture News, praised the feature even more than
The Film Daily, judging Keaton's work to be not only his best film "since he graduated from the
two reel ranks" but also "one of the best pieces of comedy business ever developed in a picture." Comparing
Spite Marriage to
Charlie Chaplin's
The Gold Rush (1925), Greene, in his review, stated: "The picture is packed with laughs" and reports that the sequence in which Keaton puts his intoxicated wife to bed evoked from the audience "a continual roar for over half a reel." Then, in May,
Photoplay provided another, more succinct review to its large readership: "One of the best Buster Keaton has made, with Dorothy Sebastian excellent. Don't miss." Keaton subsequently appeared in MGM's all-talking variety show
The Hollywood Revue of 1929 but his performance was entirely in pantomime. Audiences attending M-G-M's theaters had to wait until the spring of 1930 to hear Keaton's voice, in the musical comedy
Free and Easy. ==See also==