Kinematograph Weekly called it an "engrossing and thrilling tale."
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The planning along the lines of a military operation, the trek through the sewers, the night watchman and his cat, the tear-gas and the fatal slip – these have quickly become the new stereotypes of the bank robbery nerve-stretcher. This tame and unconvincing example adds nothing new, unless it be an excruciatingly lady-like heroine, and no one connected with its execution, except perhaps William Lucas, appears to have taken the title very seriously." The
New York Times TV critic called the film "an item of first rate suspense". The
Boston Globe called it "professional enough but just too commonplace to be absorbing." ==References==