At the end of the movie, Larita Filton tells a group of news photographers: "Shoot! There's nothing left to kill." In his book, written with director François Truffaut, Sir Alfred Hitchcock sheepishly admitted it was the worst title card he ever wrote.
For their advertisements at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, sponsor McRoskey Mattress Company used the distinctive photo from this movie of Isabel Jeans in bed, with her arms raised.
The play opened in London and New York City in 1925. The New York City production began on December 7, 1925 and had one hundred forty-seven performances with Jane Cowl as Larita, Robert Harris as John, and Halliwell Hobbes as Colonel Whittaker.
Assuming its copyright has not lapsed already, this film and all others produced in 1928 enter the U.S. public domain in 2024.