Producer/director Russ Meyer shot the film in four days during the spring of 1958, on a budget of $24,000.
Was shut down the day of its premiere at a San Diego movie theater. The film was later confiscated by local police. It wasn't shown again until a year later, in 1960, at a theater house in Seattle.
No audio was recorded during filming, so none of the characters are heard speaking. Only music is played throughout the film and the only voice heard is that of the narrator.
The lead actor, Bill Teas, was an old Army buddy of director Russ Meyer from World War II, and Meyer let him use his own name as the character's name.
This was the precursor to a then-provocative genre called the "nudie-cutie." It featured plenty of bare breasts, but sexual encounters were forbidden.