Loosely based on the classic fairy tale, this version of Beauty and The Beast sees handsome Duke Eduardo (Mark Damon) suffering under a curse brought about by his tyrant father: when the sun sets, the young man is transformed into a beast, who looks remarkably like Universal's The Wolf Man (this film's 'monster' also created by that film's legendary make-up artist Jack P. Pierce). By night, Eduardo searches for the hidden tomb of Scarlotti, the alchemist who placed the curse, hoping to find some way to put an end to his torment. Joyce Taylor plays Althea, betrothed to Eduardo, who discovers her beloved's secret but remains devoted, and Michael Pate stars as villainous Uncle Bruno, who wants to overthrow his nephew and become ruler in his place.
This is a fairly routine fantasy with gentle gothic horror undertones that plays out with few surprises - it's a handsomely mounted production but predictably scripted and, for the most part, flatly directed by Edward L. Cahn, who delivers little energy or excitement, at least until the final act, when some genuine peril is introduced for Eduardo and Althea as Bruno incites hatred and leads an angry mob to the castle to try and kill the beast. In time-honoured fashion, true love saves the day as Althea's willingness to die alongside Eduardo breaks the curse in the nick of time. Damon and Taylor make for good-looking protagonists, but Pate steals the show with another one of his brilliant boo-hiss bad-guy performances.