The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "It is a gay and cheerful film in which Jack Hulbert and Cicely Courtneidge share the honours and are as good as always whether on stage or screen. There are some very amusing interludes, the best being when they turn up at a girls' school disguised as an Indian Colonel and his wife asking after a non-existent daughter. The rest of the cast plays up well and the direction is very competent."
Kine Weekly wrote: "Scintillating musical comedy espionage burlesque, competently and ambitiously adapted from the persistent West End stage suvvess. ... The linking-up of the salient gags is a litte lacking in imagination – the director has taken the stage play a trifle too literally – but the gags themselves are really good. Fortunately, nothing can damp the high spirits of the stars or the play's inherent bubbling humour, and the two together make entertainment that goes with a swing."
The Radio Times Guide to Films David Parkinson gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "You really needed to have been there at the time to appreciate the humour in this woeful comedy of errors. Wartime audiences were so grateful to see just about anything that they were willing to forgive even the most dismal movies – particularly morale-boosting flag-wavers. The lowest of many dips below zero is the scene in which Cicely Courtneidge poses as a French maid to catch hubby Jack Hulbert with Leonora Corbett."
Leslie Halliwell wrote: "Light-hearted adaptation of a stage musical, showing the stars in their best film form."
TV Guide found the film "redolent of the
Thin Man series, with the added fillip of the musical-stage talent, but lacking the charisma of the stars of that series." ==References==