When Charles Schneer and Ray Harryhausen were looking for a producer for The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, one of the hopefuls was Edward Small, who turned them down. When Sinbad proved to be a huge hit, Small was determined to duplicate the former movie with the same director and stars. Although he couldn't get Harryhausen, Jim Danforth came close to duplicating Sinbad's monsters with Cormoran, the flying dragon, and the Imp instead of the Cyclops, Dragon, and Genie.
This was producer Edward Small's attempt to cash in on the huge success of Le septième voyage de Sinbad (1958). He even hired the same director (Nathan Juran), hero (Kerwin Mathews) and villain (Torin Thatcher).
The film was unreleased in the UK until 1967 and then received cuts for an 'A' certificate to edit the witch attack on the ship, Princess Elaine being attacked by the giant, and Jack's fight with the dragon.
Torin Thatcher had been appearing on Broadway in "The Miracle Worker" but quit that role in order to appear in this film.
The headdress for Pendragon and the dress used by the bewitched Princess Elaine can be seen in the The Manchurian Candidate (1962) during the fancy dress party held by the character Mrs. Eleanor Iselin. Both films were made by United Artists.