The film received generous financial support, and became one of the major events celebrating Israel's twentieth anniversary. The Prime Minister at the time,
Levi Eshkol, as well as ministers and other public figures attended the premiere. Although it garnered mixed reviews, the film had a good box office (selling some 320,000 tickets) and a significant cultural impact. This was Assi Dayan's debut role and it made him into an Israeli film icon. The film has received attention in scholarship from writers like
Nurith Gertz and
Ella Shohat. Shohat, writing about the film's heroic protagonist, noting that in
Hebrew language gibor (hero),
gever (man),
gvura (bravery),
ligvor (to conquer, to overpower), and
ligvor al (to win) all share the
etymological root GBR, reflecting closely linked concepts of bravery, mastery and masculinity which were part of the Israeli "heroic-nationalist" films of this generation. ==References==