This film was filmed in the short-lived Natural Vision widescreen 65mm process. Natural Vision was also the name of the 3-D process used to film 3-D feature films in Hollywood in 1953-54.
This film was presented by George K. Spoor at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair in a specially designed 1,000 seat theatre with a 64 x 38 foot screen, built at a reported cost of $125,000, called The Spoor Spectaculum. Admission was 25 cents for adults and 15 cents for children. The attraction was not a success and in August 1933 the exhibit "Crime House," featuring scientific exhibits showing the fight against crime, and what the Motion Picture Herald magazine described as "an 18 minute reel of newsreel thrill shots", opened in the remodeled building.