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IMDbPro

Radar Men from the Moon

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 2 Std. 47 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,5/10
1269
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Roy Barcroft and George D. Wallace in Radar Men from the Moon (1952)
SuperheldActionFamilieScience-Fiction

Die Geschichte Schottlands wird durch Jahrhunderte blutiger Fehden, Kriege und Zwangsumsiedlungen romantisiert. In den Glens gibt es heute noch eine unerledigte Angelegenheit, einen Krieg um... Alles lesenDie Geschichte Schottlands wird durch Jahrhunderte blutiger Fehden, Kriege und Zwangsumsiedlungen romantisiert. In den Glens gibt es heute noch eine unerledigte Angelegenheit, einen Krieg um die Kontrolle über das Land.Die Geschichte Schottlands wird durch Jahrhunderte blutiger Fehden, Kriege und Zwangsumsiedlungen romantisiert. In den Glens gibt es heute noch eine unerledigte Angelegenheit, einen Krieg um die Kontrolle über das Land.

  • Regie
    • Fred C. Brannon
  • Drehbuch
    • Ronald Davidson
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • George D. Wallace
    • Aline Towne
    • Roy Barcroft
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    4,5/10
    1269
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Fred C. Brannon
    • Drehbuch
      • Ronald Davidson
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • George D. Wallace
      • Aline Towne
      • Roy Barcroft
    • 36Benutzerrezensionen
    • 16Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos21

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    Topbesetzung32

    Ändern
    George D. Wallace
    George D. Wallace
    • Commando Cody
    • (as George Wallace)
    Aline Towne
    Aline Towne
    • Joan Gilbert
    Roy Barcroft
    Roy Barcroft
    • Retik
    William Bakewell
    William Bakewell
    • Ted Richards
    Clayton Moore
    Clayton Moore
    • Graber
    Peter Brocco
    Peter Brocco
    • Krog
    Robert R. Stephenson
    Robert R. Stephenson
    • Daly
    • (as Bob Stevenson)
    Don Walters
    • Henderson
    Tom Steele
    Tom Steele
    • Zerg
    Dale Van Sickel
    Dale Van Sickel
    • Alon
    Wilson Wood
    • Hank
    Noel Cravat
    Noel Cravat
    • Robal
    Baynes Barron
    Baynes Barron
    • Nesor - Retik's Lab Aide [Ch.2]
    Paul McGuire
    • Bream
    Ted Thorpe
    • Al's Cafe Bartender [Ch. 6, 7, 12]
    Dick Cogan
    Dick Cogan
    • Jones - Dirt-Road Motorist (Ch. 6)
    Joe Bailey
    • Policeman #1 at Landing Field [Chs. 1, 3, 8]
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Billy Dix
    • Duke - Warehouse Henchman [Ch. 5]
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Fred C. Brannon
    • Drehbuch
      • Ronald Davidson
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen36

    4,51.2K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    westerners

    Available in true stereo goggles DVD!

    I just wanted to point out that currently this is one of two stereo goggles 3D movie serials

    Can be viewed on either European or American format DVD player over most any television set using an inexpensive adapter and 3D shutter glasses.

    The wired glasses are cheaper and more bullet proof than the wireless, and no expensive batteries. Battery door can eventually become loose and then lost, so wireless not way cool like wired's.

    A real geek fun festival to be watching rocketman fly by wire in 3D!
    6Mike-764

    Corny, but Fun

    Moon ruler Retik assigned one of his people to go on Earth and cripple its defenses to a point when the Moon people could go down and invade it. The defense department gets a hold of the idea, and assigns Commando Cody, with flying rocket suit and all. Cody, along with his assistants, journey to the moon, are nearly killed and go back down upon Earth to stop the sabotage in progress in order to force Retik to come down and strike himself. The only Republic serial that did a good job trying to parody the 50's science craze, is at times ridiculous but still a lot of fun to watch. Sort-of sequel to King of the Rocketman and later inspired a kiddie TV show. Clayton Moore ( the Lone Ranger himself ) plays one of the Moon Men's hired guns. Just a little above average serial at best. I never saw the MST3K version, but they would have had a lot more fun doing Zombies of the Stratosphere or Flying Discman from Mars. Rating based on serials- 6 out of 10.
    6AlsExGal

    introduces the recurring character of Commando Cody without much background

    George Wallace stars as Commando Cody, a scientist and inventor who uses a jet-pack and special helmet to fly around and fight bad guys. He must thwart the efforts of Retik (Roy Barcroft), Ruler of the Moon to spearhead an invasion of the Earth so that the dwindling population of the moon can move here. Retik tasks his lackey Krog (Peter Brocco) with using the advanced weaponry of the moon to weaken the Earth's defenses. Cody and his team of helpers fight Krog at every step, so Krog enlists Earth criminals Graber (Clayton Moore) and Daly (Robert Stevenson) to help out.

    This serial introduces the recurring character of Commando Cody, but it doesn't give much background, and we jump right into the middle of the action. The movie reuses a lot of footage from earlier serials, most prominently King of the Rocketmen and The Undersea Kingdom. Chief villain Retik is wearing the same moldy costume previously used in The Purple Monster Strikes and Flying Disc Man from Mars. The action is typical serial stuff, with lots of fist fights, and shoot-outs where no one is actually shot. I enjoy how the villains often continue to punch Cody in his metal helmet. One would think that it would quickly become apparent that that was a bad idea. Future Lone Ranger Clayton Moore was said to have been very exuberant in his fight scenes, and even broke leading man Wallace's nose. Commando Cody shall return!
    3lemon_magic

    Great character design, good flying effects, and that's about it...

    I saw most of the episodes of RMFTM as a teenager on "Cliffhanger Theater" running after midnight on a local station some years ago, and then again when Mystery Science Theatre riffed on it in the early 90's. Time has not been kind to it.

    I can certainly make allowances for the special effects, which were quite impressive for a low budget 50's serial (IMO Commando Cody's flying scenes were better than George Reeves/Superman's in his TV show). And I can also make allowances for the ahem, "acting", and fight choreography -. except for the guy who plays the ruler of the Moon Men. He is incredibly miscast. He looks and acts like the fellow who comes to fix your plumbing, not the despotic ruler of an alien race. Even the corny dialog works all right - everyone rattles off their lines like strings of firecrackers, with no wasted time or pauses for things like "thought" or "introspection". Since everyone does this, the viewer finds it immersive after awhile, and even to my modern sensibilities, it doesn't bother much.

    What really irritates me is the writing and the plotting. I'm not talking about the sunny weather on the moon, or baking soda powered rocket ships, or a flying suit that has controls labeled "up/down" and "fast/slow". I'm not even bothered by the cheesiness of the resolutions to the cliffhangers that end each chapter. I'm talking about the fact that our supposed heroes are dumber than fence posts and have no cumulative memory. And by the fact that although that the dialog clips along like an express train, the plot goes through the same motions again and again.

    Dig it: Commando Cody and his pal are the spearhead of a top secret hi tech science lab charged with protecting Earth (or at least the USA) against an insidious alien invasion. But his office has no guards or security checkpoints. They don't even have locks on the front doors. So the bad guys walk RIGHT IN and beat the crap out of the Cody and his staff ...not once (perhaps understandable) but SEVERAL times. They even kidnap his female assistant on the second try. And they never get any smarter. To further prove my point, allow me to point out the way that Cody jumps in his flying suit and flies around getting into trouble and never actually seems to succeed in catching anyone. He does this over and over and over. Cody also flies his ship to the Moon (the woman assistant comes along to cook), stays for about 30 seconds and immediately turns around and comes back. Cody captures one of the Atomic Ray guns...and immediately loses it again to the bad guys because he couldn't be bothered to lock it up. And so on.

    And you would think that if Cody's efforts were so vital to saving the USA from the Moon Men, that he might ask for a few soldiers with carbines, a few helicopters and a tank or two to back him up, instead of just working with the local police all the time. This was supposed to be a military operation, but they act like it's another episode of "Gangbusters".

    It's all rather hard to stomach. I appreciate that the creators were severely limited in the scope of their story by budget and time constraints...and I appreciate that Cody is actually a reasonably tough hombre (even though he loses half of his fistfights). But I just can't help yelling "DOOR! LOCK THE DOOOOR!!" when the gangsters simply walk into his lab, or try to blow up the ship and there are NO security measures at the landing site in place...not even a fence (!).

    Still, it's OK. Of the three Republic serials I've watched, "Phantom Creeps" had a better plot, and "Undersea Kingdom" had more atmosphere (hah!) and a better hero than "Radar Men", but it's an OK time-waster.

    BTW...why "Radar" men? They didn't use radar, they used Atomic Ray Guns. Shouldn't the title have been "Atomic Ray Gun Men From The Moon?"
    5flapdoodle64

    Cody Goes Commando

    (Or: 'Republic Recycles Rocket Man') In 1949, in one of their last bursts of inspiration, the thrill engineers at Republic produced 'King of the Rocket Men,' which capitalized on the popularity of the flying hero Superman, from the eponymous 1948 Columbia film serial. Although Rocket Man flew, he was in fact an ordinary human scientist who happened to have a helmet and rocket pack, and who battled the terrorist Dr. Vulcan.

    King of the Rocketmen premiered 6-8-1949...3 weeks later, on 6-27-1949, the DuMont TV network premiered Captain Video, another science fiction hero who became one of the 1st bona fide superstars of early TV. After Rocket Man and Capt. Video, a number of science fiction heroes were popular on TV up through about 1955, when other trends began to dominate.

    Capt. Video's creators had been inspired by the movie serials. In turn, Columbia Pictures obtained the rights to the Capt. Video character, and produced the super-cheap but super-profitable 'Captain Video Master of the Stratosphere' serial.

    During this craze for quasi-military science-fiction heroes, Republic re-purposed the splendid Rocket Man flying footage and mixed in additional stock footage from about a dozen other serials to create Commando Cody. The name Commando Cody, BTW, was surely designed to capitalize on the popular TV character 'Commander Cory', of the hit TV series 'Space Patrol.' Thus it came to be that Republic was in the position of trying, late in the game, to jump aboard a trend that it inadvertently helped create! (But by the end of 1956, both the movie serials and the TV space heroes would be gone forever!)

    One of the ways you can identify the re-used footage is when people in 1952 suddenly all hop into 1938 or 1946 automobiles for a car chase. You have to remember, cars from this era were fortunate to last 50,000 miles, so the idea that the streets of downtown Los Angeles of 1952 are suddenly filled with 1938 cars is not plausible. I lost track of how many times the characters all jumped into these automotive anachronisms...

    Recylcing old footage is not necessarily a crime...in fact, some of Republic's best serials featured loads of reused material. But this serial shows a seriously uninspired writer, and it all seems kind of forced. Not to mention, Rettik the Moon Man is not a particularly menacing villain, with the other Moon Men and their Earth gangster stooges also lacking in menace and brain power. The Moon Scenes are pretty bad, even when compared with the stuff from Flash Gordon, and there is not a lot of emotional energy.

    George Wallace is physically unimpressive as the titular hero, but in the action scenes he does a surprisingly good job of conveying urgency. He is actually OK, as are his companions.

    Probably the best performance is by Clayton Moore, as one of the Earth gangsters inexplicably selling out his own planet for chump change. The performance is fun for everyone who saw his Lone Ranger performances and wondered what the guy actually looked like...well, here he is, and a he's a good actor, it turns out.

    There are plenty of fight scenes, but nothing as inspired as the stuff from the early 1940's. Worst of all, the final chapter resolves the conflict without Our Hero getting into a suitable physical confrontation with the villain. This is rather unsatisfying.

    By 1952, serials were fading fast, in terms of popularity and quality. This one is typical for that era. There are 2 other Rocket Man serials besides this one, the aforementioned 'King of the Rocket Men,' and 'Zombies of the Stratosphere.' Both King and Zombies are superior this serial, although this serial is an amiable waste of time.

    The great Lydecker Brothers created some new FX for this serial, some nice shots of a rocket ship taking off and flying...these shots were reused in Zombies, as well as being used in the amazingly strange Republic quasi-TV series 'Commando Cody, Sky Marshall of the Universe.'

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      During a fight scene between George D. Wallace as Commando Cody and Clayton Moore as the villain Graber, Wallace zigged when he should have zagged, and Moore connected with him and broke his nose.
    • Patzer
      Ordering the rocket ship to turn around, the pilot is told to make a "quick 360" turn. In fact, a 360 turn would simply turn the ship completely around in a circle to resume its present course.
    • Zitate

      [Commando Cody, Ted, and Joan are about to board ship for the moon]

      Commando Cody: I still think this is no trip for a woman.

      Joan Gilbert: Now don't start that again. You'll be very glad to have someone along who can cook your meals.

    • Verbindungen
      Edited from The Johnstown Flood (1926)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. Januar 1952 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Planet Men from Mars
    • Drehorte
      • Mulholland Drive, Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(road scenes)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Republic Pictures
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 185.702 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 47 Min.(167 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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