The film was very popular in the
U.S.S.R. and in
Germany. In fact,
Adolf Hitler (then fairly unknown) sent a fan letter to Lina Basquette after seeing the film, saying she was his favorite American actress and he liked the movie. The film's popularity in the Soviet Union is believed in part to be due to the fact that the USSR's film censors edited out the main character's conversion to Christianity near the end of the movie. It was a
box office disaster in the US. By late 1928, sound films had become extremely popular with the general public, so when a silent version was released in August 1928, it was virtually ignored. DeMille attributed the film's failure to its already outmoded format, at a time when sound films had won over the public. The film was made into a
part-talkie, with the addition of some dialogue sequences, a musical score and a theme song; this is the form in which most audiences saw the film. The theme song from the sound version became a minor hit and was recorded by several artists, including
Nat Shilkret for Victor Records. Unfortunately, due to the long delay in releasing the sound version, the film was again outdated by the time of its release, as all-talking films were quickly becoming standard by mid-1929. ==Preservation==