Box office The film earned billings of £143,000 which Rank's internal records described as "good". The
Motion Picture Herald confirms the film was a success at the box office and helped Shiner be voted the third most popular British star of 1953. The success of the film led to Carstairs being reunited with Shiner in
Up to His Neck although Paul Soskin was replaced as producer by Hugh Stewart since Carstairs no longer wanted to work with Soskin.
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "
Good Morning, Boys was possibly crude and to some distasteful, and its success depended on Will Hay. Ronald Shiner, though a popular comedian whose presence will no doubt ensure the film's box-office success, is far from being another Will Hay, and the film consequently remains crude and distasteful. The comedy, poorly scripted, is slow and unfunny, and depends mainly on slapstick and slap and tickle." The
Radio Times called it a "misfiring Ronald Shiner vehicle... Less amusing than [Will] Hay's St Michael's outings and less anarchic than the
St Trinian's romps, this efficient but underwhelming caper is all too typical of its director, John Paddy Carstairs". ==References==