Captain America (serial)
1944 Republic black-and-white serial film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Captain America is a 1944 Republic black-and-white 15-chapter serial film loosely based on the Timely Comics (now Marvel Comics) character Captain America. It was the last Republic serial made about a superhero. It also has the distinction of being the most expensive serial that Republic ever made. It stands as the first theatrical release connected to a Marvel character; the next theatrical release featuring a Marvel hero would not occur for more than 40 years. It was the last live-action rendition of a Marvel character in any medium until Spider-Man appeared in the Spidey Super Stories segment of the children's television series The Electric Company in 1974.
Captain America | |
---|---|
Directed by | Elmer Clifton John English |
Written by | Royal Cole Harry Fraser Joseph Poland Ronald Davidson Basil Dickey Jesse Duffy Grant Nelson |
Based on | |
Produced by | William J O'Sullivan |
Starring | Dick Purcell Lorna Gray Lionel Atwill Charles Trowbridge Russell Hicks George J. Lewis John Davidson |
Cinematography | John MacBurnie |
Edited by | Wallace Grissell Earl Turner |
Music by | Mort Glickman |
Distributed by | Republic Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 15 chapters / 243 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $182,623 (negative cost: $222,906)[1] |
The serial sees Captain America, really District Attorney Grant Gardner, trying to thwart the plans of the Scarab, really museum curator Dr. Cyrus Maldor—especially regarding his attempts to acquire the "Dynamic Vibrator" and "Electronic Firebolt", devices that could be used as super-weapons.[2]
In a rare plot element for Republic, the secret identity of the villain is known to the audience from the beginning, if not to the characters in the serial. The studio's usual approach was the use of a mystery villain who was unmasked as one of the other supporting characters only in the final chapter.