Promotional activities An advertisement of Zindagi compares
Goethe and
Voltaire's notions of life with that of Baura's.
Critical reception generally received positive reviews for critics.
The Bombay Chronicle lauded the film for Pankaj Mullick's "divine music", two songs of Segal that are "the soul of melody and pathos," the "cynical" humour of the first half of the film and the "subtle, heart-wrenching" emotionalism of the second half. They also praised the "haunting" performance of Jamuna.
Filmindia called the film an "all smoke" and described it as generally "too intellectual" for the average audience.
Bhagwan Das Garga writes, "The plot is slight but Barua's nuanced characterization and wealth of observation makes it a richly rewarding work."
Controversies In a frame sequence of the 1939 film
Aadmi by
V. Shantaram, which was simultaneously released along with , the romantic "pessimism" of Barua was caricatured. According to Garga, this incident provided enough "grist" for the news media. An unnamed Gujarati weekly remarked, "Shantaram's eye is on life, Barua's on death." Jamil Ansari, a critic, strongly defended .
Khwaja Ahmad Abbas compared the two films and wrote: ==References==