The film was designed as an anti-Communist response to the famous Soviet film
Battleship Potemkin (1925) by
Sergei Eisenstein. It was initially given the working title
Battleship Sevastopol. says in its biography of the director, Karl Anton, that he "served up to the brownshirt rulers a clumsy anti-communist Nazi replica of the Soviet Russian-Revolution film
Battleship Potemkin". The story was supposedly based on a factual report written by Charlie Roellinghoff. The film passed the censor on 16 December 1936, and was premiered on 5 January 1937. The exterior filming took place in Yugoslavia and on the armored cruiser
Dubrovnik. The set-designer was Erich Zander. Alfred Stoeger Anton was assistant director. ==Distribution==