Critics generally praised the acting and direction but decried the plot and script, characterizing it as a "seamy-side melodrama" and "a run-of-the-mill problem melodrama". The
Chicago Tribune wrote: "Jimmy Dunn does as well as anyone could, considering the plot and the script, and Mona Freeman is appealing, but the whole business is leaden and definitely second class fare". The
St. Louis Globe Democrat found it difficult to make sense of the story and its message. Ziggy starts out earning audience sympathy for her difficult upbringing, but loses it by accepting her mother's advice that "the path of easy virtue is the easy way". Denny is at the same time a
racketeer and "a likeable Irishman who is ever so good to his mother". After Ziggy suffers for her hedonistic lifestyle and Denny serves time in prison, their reunion seems to convey that "their romance should be both logical and appealing". The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called Dunn's performance "restrained and believable … [b]ut this role doesn't give him a chance to show the stuff he did in
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn". Similarly,
The San Francisco Examiner commended Dunn for being "more than adequate in an inadequate role". Freeman's performance received harsher scrutiny in light of the extremes of personality she was required to play.
The Baltimore Sun wrote: Miss Freeman looks lovely, innocent, and very young, at all times. This is remarkable when you consider that she has to impersonate a thief, a devoted young mother, a brazen mantrap, an industrious housewife, a shoplifter, a war widow, a bar butterfly, a confidence woman and a specimen of fine womanhood, and all within 95 minutes. The only way Republic could get this role played right would be to have
Katharine Cornell,
Helen Hayes,
June Havoc and
Ina Claire do it in relays. Even then we wouldn't like it. The
Fort Worth Star-Telegram wrote: "Miss Freeman should get A-plus for her sincere attempt to play a bad girl. Fine features, a sensitive face and a touch of gentleness about her makes it doubtful casting. A tougher brat would have filled the role better". The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette panned Freeman's acting as "immature". The
Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph complimented Santell's "minor directorial flourishes", adding, "As a matter of fact, his contribution alone puts the picture into the general category of worth seeing".
The Minneapolis Star called
George Antheil's score "outstanding". ==Restoration==