Box office According to
Kinematograph Weekly the film was a "long shot" at the British box office in August 1942. The same magazine later called the film a "surprise hit" and claimed British National were thinking of making a sequel
Those Kids from Town Again.
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A good deal of thought has obviously been given to this story and as many sides as possible of the absorbing question of dealing with evacuee children have been covered, with, of course, the one exception of those who take to their foster parents naturally and lead a healthy but uneventful life. It is therefore a pity that Dane Gordon is allowed to overact so sadly as the Vicar's son and amusing points occasionally flogged by repetition. There is some excellent work by the rest of the children, especially from Angela Glynfie as Young Maud and George Cole as Charlie. The comedy is natural in the main and should entertain all classes of audiences very satisfactorily. An admirable cast of grownups play second fiddle to 'those kids' more than competently."
Kine Weekly said it had "some good moments and a certain amount of child psychology, but it hardly presents a good case for evacuation". ... It is difficult to find out what the central theme is aiming at. The tough kids get away with it all the time, so the moral is hardly a good one. It is mainly because the juveniles act so capably that the material gets over as well as it does. Arguments between Lizzie's class-conscious father and the squire are trite and seem dated in effect. Sentiment concerning Lizzie and her sister is quite good and not unduly overstressed. The trouble is that the picture's continuity and purpose are both very weak."
The Daily Film Renter wrote: "Commendable popular entertainment. ... There is ample fun and considerable cleverness in a series of burlesques of the rough and tough methods of the Dead End Kids; while some fascinating singing comes from Shirley Lenner as the elder of two sisters billeted on a hard spinster."
Cinema praised "sympathetic direction...(which) cleverly sets wartime atmosphere and..a convincing picture of reactions of parents, children and hosts", but felt the film faltered badly in its later stages by "resorting to frank slapstick". ==References==