1956's "Curucu, Beast of the Amazon" (pronounced CUR-Uh-Sue, working title simply "Beast of the Amazon"), Universal's most notorious genre effort of this decade, its misleading advertising earning brickbats from monster kids issued on a double bill with "The Mole People," a fall from grace for writer-director Curt Siodmak, shot on location in Brazil a year before a follow up called "Love Slaves of the Amazon." Color adds nothing but a travelogue feel to both items, John Bromfield boasting the hilarious moniker 'Rock Dean' (continuing his beefcake ways from "Revenge of the Creature" and Lon Chaney's "Manfish"), joined by pretty nurse Beverly Garland on a treacherous journey upriver along the Amazon in search of a legendary monster that frequents Curucu Falls, claiming the lives of several natives before leaving tracks back into the water. Caimans, pythons, piranha, tarantulas, jaguars, wild buffalo, headhunters, a witch doctor, and one fortuitous patient await during the endless slog through the jungle, only three brief scenes depicting the titular Beast, its rampage explained thusly: "descends from the falls to punish the people who deserted the lands of their fathers." Just after the opening credits we catch a glimpse of a manlike creature with toucan beak, feathers, tusks, fangs, and huge talons, emitting what sounds like the wail of a wild boar (or is that bore?) before clawing a woman to death; the second comes at the half hour mark, shorter and far less intriguing than the first. The final third kicks off with a shimmering glimpse of something below the water's surface, possibly 'luminous fish' (obvious optical special effects here), then Beverly gets kidnapped by the Beast, only to see it finally be revealed as...something not very beastly, nor even interesting. With nearly another 30 minutes to go this definitely comes as a devastating anticlimax, the remainder a repeat of the first half.