Although it was made at the height of Peter Sellers's popularity, and had great publicity as a result of his also directing it, this was a considerable critical and financial failure - so much so that advertising took the extraordinary step of citing derogatory critical notices as well as favorable ones and suggesting that audiences might like to make up their own minds. A similar controversy attended the opening of the first London production of the original play, which took place in 1933 - Raymond Massey, who played Sellers's role of Topaze in it, reports in his autobiography that the first act was met with rapturous applause and even a standing ovation, the second act by markedly more reserved applause, and the end of the play with virtually no applause at all and audible audience hostility.
Peter Sellers was believed to have had all copies of this film taken out of public domain and destroyed.
The British Film Institute has the only known copy of this film. It has been restored and digitized, and is now available online for viewing (for the first time in decades) through the bfi.org.uk website.
Despite the great popularity that Peter Sellers enjoyed in the United States in the early 1960s, this film took nearly eighteen months to arrive in America after its unsuccessful British release, and was then re-named "I Like Money".
A film which has remained virtually unseen for many years, "Mr. Topaze" is due to make its debut on the Blu Ray/DVD double format range.