Directed by Irvin Berwick and produced by Jack Kevan, The Monster of Piedras Blancas is a low-budget horror film that blends seaside atmosphere with classic monster movie tropes. Released by Filmservice Distributors Corporation, it’s often remembered for its gruesome touches and its eerie, isolated setting—a lighthouse on the California coast, where something ancient and bloodthirsty lurks.
Plot Summary
In a sleepy coastal town near Piedras Blancas, a series of decapitated, bloodless corpses begins to surface. The culprit? A prehistoric, amphibious creature that’s been secretly fed for years by the reclusive lighthouse keeper Sturges (John Harmon). As the monster’s appetite grows, it begins hunting humans, leading to a final confrontation atop the lighthouse where both man and beast meet their fate.
Cast Highlights
- Les Tremayne as Dr. Sam Jorgenson
- John Harmon as Sturges, the lighthouse keeper
- Jeanne Carmen as Lucille Sturges
- Don Sullivan as Fred
- Forrest Lewis as Constable Matson
- Wayne Berwick (the director’s son) as Little Jimmy
Behind-the-Scenes Trivia
- The monster suit reused parts from other films: the feet and lower torso came from the Metaluna Mutant in This Island Earth (1955), and the claws were borrowed from The Mole People (1956)
- The Point Conception Lighthouse was used for exterior shots, though the film is set at Piedras Blancas, a real promontory on California’s central coast
- In 1965, the monster costume was reused in an episode of Flipper titled “Flipper’s Monster,” directed by Ricou Browning, who famously played the Gill-Man in Creature from the Black Lagoon
- The film’s tone is darker than many of its contemporaries, with graphic violence and a more menacing creature design
Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.