The project began as
The Bargain, a script written by Errol Flynn, who signed a multi-picture deal with Marshall in July 1949 to produce the film and other features. The film was also known as
Bloodline and
New Orleans Adventure in its planning stages. Flynn signed a multi-picture deal with Marshall in July 1949 to produce the film, to be produced independently with distribution arranged later, and other features.
Robert Florey, who had directed Errol Flynn in his last bit part in 1935, was hired as an uncredited consultant. Marshall and Flynn also produced the unreleased
Hello God in 1951.
Micheline Presle, who married Marshall in 1950, was borrowed from
Twentieth Century-Fox to play the female lead.
Gérard Philipe was scheduled to join the cast but did not appear in the film. Filming started on July 15, 1950 in Paris. Exteriors representing
New Orleans were recreated in
Villefranche, with studio scenes shot at the
Victorine Studios in
Nice and the
Billancourt Studios in Paris. Marshall, who had no experience as a director, persuaded French authorities to permit filming of an English-language film without a French version as the law required. Under Flynn's contract with
Warner Bros., he was allowed to make one outside film a year until 1962, provided that the film had a major distributor. Flynn later claimed that during filming, Marshall secretly arranged for distribution by the
mini-major studio
Republic Pictures, displeasing both Warner Bros. and MGM, which had films starring Flynn awaiting release. Flynn worried that Warner Bros. would use the deal as an excuse to cancel his contract. On December 18, 1950 he filed suit in
Los Angeles Superior Court seeking to enjoin Republic from releasing the film and to prevent Warner Bros. from canceling the contract until the court could determine whether Republic was a major distributor. The film was intended as the first of two to star Flynn under Marshall's direction; the next was to be
The Man Who Cried, a psychological thriller about a perfect crime set over a four-hour period. However,
The Man Who Cried was never produced because of a dispute between Marshall and Flynn over
Hello God. In January 1952, Flynn asked a court to formally end his partnership with Marshall. ==Reception==