This film was never released and only exists in the form of an incomplete work print that has been lost.
Production on the film was a fiasco. When the script called for the soldiers to be captured by Indians, the production was unable to hire Native American actors, so members of the main cast had to pull double duty as the Indians, disguised with burlap (hessian) sacks on their heads with eye holes cut out. The story called for a woman to be part of the trek and a female proved unavailable, Mitchell substituted a gay male accountant associated with the film, put him in drag, and blurred any shots he was prominent in to obscure his face. When Mitchell learned that there was a group of wild animals for an entertainment attraction staying at the same hotel as the crew, Mitchell insisted on putting them in the film, resulting in a grizzly bear charging the cameraman and a Leopard nearly mauling one of the actors.(Information from "Henry Darrow: Lightning in the Bottle" by Jan Pippins and Henry Darrow, BearManor Media, 2012, pages 173-175)
The project initially began as Cameron Mitchell's attempt to film an account of the life of Jesus Christ, with Henry Darrow playing the lead role. However, after Darrow balked at Mitchell's insistence that he wear an actual crown of thorns, Mitchell reworked the concept into an allegorical Christ story instead.