57
Metascore
6 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75Chicago ReaderReece PendletonChicago ReaderReece PendletonWellman’s splendid direction animates an otherwise static script, deftly blending comedic moments with surprisingly dark undertones. This 1931 drama may lack the punch of Wellman’s The Public Enemy, released the same year, but it’s still a fine display of his talents.
- 75San Francisco ChronicleSan Francisco ChronicleGritty, bleak and sexy, the movie is also, between the lines, a strong feminist statement.
- 63New York PostLou LumenickNew York PostLou LumenickSafe in Hell doesn’t offer anything extraordinary in the way of skin or innuendo, but it’s chockablock with the kind of situations and characters that would be verboten on screen for nearly three decades commencing in mid-1934.
- Safe in Hell is a little reminiscent of "The Unholy Garden," with its tropic sanctuary where rogues of various nationalities live out their days in happy oblivion, safe from the long arm of extradition. The theme is a good deal sadder, a sort of meldodramatization of all those sad songs about the women who will die rapturously for their men.
- A winding story with no real direction.
- 40VarietyVarietyA sad and unsatisfactory finish is obviously an attempt to lend credence to an impossible yarn. It doesn't help, for as long as the story is thoroughly unbelievable up to the finish, no ending could change that impression. [22 Dec 1931, p.15]