[2] Drug dealer Sanesi is trying to get her old friend Marisa to have her husband, a senior bank official, sing.
[2] Freda claimed he shot the film within 15 days, with three on location in Naples and the rest in Rome at CSC studios.
[3] The film marked the first collaboration between Freda and his longtime director of photography, Gábor Pogány.
[4] See Naples and Die was distributed theatrically in Italy by Associati Produttori Indipendenti on March 29, 1952.
[6] On its release in the United States, the New York Times stated the film had a "sodden script" and that "Gianna Maria Canale, as that pretty, luckless lady, is involved in nearly every cliche dear to the devotees of daytime detergent dramas on radio, but unsmilingly she comes through [...] There are English titles but even without them it is fairly clear that sad is the word for the manufactured tragedies in See Naples and Die.