It was shot at Shepperton Studios and on location around London and Manchester, including King's Cross Station, Covent Garden, St Katharine Docks and the Great West Road.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Another mongrel child born out of English neo-realism (clean linen waving like flags from the washing lines of picturesque northern slums) and the myth of a trendy London in which all the younger people are connected with a colour supplement and dressed in last year's gear.
Although Herman and his Hermits rush eagerly around England's principal tourist attractions and everyone involved displays an indomitable (and presumably exportable) cheeriness, the message that emerges is a sadly negative one: the world is for the young, or as the heroine puts it, "One only has a few super years".
It is characteristic of the film's ephemeral and pathetically swinging world that when Judy tells Herman that she's going to Rome (via St. Pancras, incidentally) for six weeks, he should automatically assume "It's all over, then".
"[5] In The Spinning Image, Graeme Clark described the film as "something of an improvement on the Hermits' previous movie, Hold On!...The songs are better...what you're left with is an artefact that was not intended to last down the ages, but has anyway.