Live action super heroes were thin on the ground when I was a
boy.
We had little beyond Superman and Zorro on TV and Tarzan at
the movies until 1966, when Batman wowed the tube and Superman flew to
Broadway.
Imagine my surprise, then, to find that the generation ahead
of me had been much luckier, thrilling to dozens of superheroes from the comic
books, the newspaper comic strips, the pulp magazines, radio drama and original
screenplays as they dashed manically across the movie screen in 15-minute
chapter plays every Saturday during the 1930s and 1940s. Each hero’s adventure
added up to three or four hours on screen!
I longed to see them as a boy, but they were never shown.
When I did get to watch them as an adult, I could still see beyond the
repetitive action of the endless, breathless chases and the strained production
values to the cinema sorcery that set someone else’s childhood soaring.
The best superhero movie serials? I think they were:
• Republic’s 1942 “Spy Smasher” starring the able, handsome Kane Richmond as the Fawcett Comic hero. The production values were high (I suspect they used some other film’s classy leftover sets), the action was fine and the wartime plot was even poignant at points.
• Republic’s 1942 “Spy Smasher” starring the able, handsome Kane Richmond as the Fawcett Comic hero. The production values were high (I suspect they used some other film’s classy leftover sets), the action was fine and the wartime plot was even poignant at points.
Captain Marvel: Hollywood's first live-action superman |
• Columbia’s 1942 “The Secret Code,” starring Paul Kelly (an
actor whose career was not confined to the serial ghetto) as the Black
Commando. For once, a superhero identity has an almost credible rationale —
Kelly plays an American agent who has infiltrated a Nazi spy ring, and who
periodically thwarts their plans as the Black Commando without blowing his
cover. It’s an original character, but, as my friend David Goode has observed,
this could easily have been a serial featuring MLJ Comics’ popular hero the
Black Hood.
• Republic’s
late entry, the 1949 serial “King of the Rocket Men.” More of those sharp
flying effects are featured in serial about an original character who directly
inspired Commando Cody and the Rocketeer. The serial ends, rather startlingly
and spectacularly, with the destruction of Manhattan by super-scientific tidal
wave.
I thought superheroes were supposed to prevent that kind of
thing? Oh, well. Rocket Man did succeed in entertaining us.
I would put the underrated THE PHANTOM(1943) on any list of superhero serials.Everything you would want from a jungle serial.And several of the chapters seem to be lifted directly from the comic strip.
ReplyDeleteGood point as always, David.
ReplyDelete