El maestro de espías, el Príncipe Daka, opera una organización de espionaje encubierta ubicada en el ahora abandonado Little Tokyo de Gotham City, que convierte a los científicos estadounide... Leer todoEl maestro de espías, el Príncipe Daka, opera una organización de espionaje encubierta ubicada en el ahora abandonado Little Tokyo de Gotham City, que convierte a los científicos estadounidenses en zombis.El maestro de espías, el Príncipe Daka, opera una organización de espionaje encubierta ubicada en el ahora abandonado Little Tokyo de Gotham City, que convierte a los científicos estadounidenses en zombis.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
- Hotel Clerk
- (sin créditos)
- Alfred Beagle
- (sin créditos)
- Plane Passenger
- (sin créditos)
- Intended Lockwood Pilot
- (sin créditos)
- Brennan [Ch. 1-3]
- (sin créditos)
- Agent Croft of Section 50 [Ch. 10-12])
- (sin créditos)
- Henchman
- (sin créditos)
- Agent on Plane [Ch. 10]
- (sin créditos)
- Fred - the Mechanic [Ch. 5-6]
- (sin créditos)
- Restaurant Patron
- (sin créditos)
- Foster [Ch. 1-4]
- (sin créditos)
- Dr. G.H. Borden [Ch. 1]
- (sin créditos)
- Cave of Horrors Thug
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
First of all it is Batman. Second, it just drips with atmosphere. All of the scenes in Daka's hideout are done so well that I can hardly imagine them being improved on. There is a darkened smoky atmosphere to the hideout with its walls covered with Japanese paintings and designs. Can anyone possibly think of a better way to have that set look? The theme music and the scraping sound heard when the door to the hideout opens are very distinctive - though minor elements of the serial, they add incredibly to the sum total of my evaluation.
J. Carrol Naish's portrayal of Dr. Daka is amongst the best acting ever done on film. The character and his dialog are just so fitting as the epitome of a villainous "jap" spy. Credit needs to go to the scriptwriters for dreaming it all up and to Naish for the brilliant execution of it. His lines and the trance like expression on his face as he talks about the emperor being the "heavenly ruler and prince of the rising sun" and freeing the "enslaved people of America" are just unbeatable acting.
Some of Daka's underlings are "zombies". They wear a radio headset receiver which has a wire connected to their spine so he can control them. Sure - that makes sense. This is the best example of serial logic and science I've ever seen. Its the perfect thing to describe to people in order to explain how things work in serials.
Of course Daka's scientific devices are powered by radium! Is it just me or do a lot of super scientific devices in serials run on radium? Saying its powered by radium somehow makes it all make sense.
Daka and Emperor Ming are the two ultimate serial villains. Sure there are some others that were really cool, but no one really even come close to them.
Nuff said!
Dr. Tito Daka is a classic villain. Daka was Japanese (He prefers to be called Nipponese) and was probably hated very much because remember, this serial was made during WW2.
The Batcave was pretty cool. I like it how Batman and Robin were taken directly to the scene of the crime by Alfred. There was no Batmobile.
I recommend this serial to anyone.
10/10 Stars
"Batman" (1943) is the landmark of the first appearance of Batman on the screen and in serial at the climax of World War II. This low budget serial does not have the Batmobile; instead, Batman and Robin use Bruce Wayne's Cadillac convertible driven by Alfred. The plot has anti-Japanese messages and is silly, naive and funny in many moments, but is also highly entertaining and divided in 15 Chapters that were presented in the theaters once a week; now they are available on DVD. (1) The Electrical Brain; (2) The Bat's Cave; (3) The Mark of the Zombies; (4) Slaves of the Rising Sun; (5) The Living Corpse; (6) Poison Peril; (7) The Phoney Doctor (8) Lured by Radium; (9) The Sign of the Sphinx; (10) Flying Spies; (11) A Nipponese Trap; (12) Embers of Evil; (13) Eight Steps Down (14) The Executioner Strikes; (15) The Doom of the Rising Sun. Maybe the funniest scenes are when Dr. Daka communicates with his submarine by radio and they release a coffin with a near-death Japanese soldier only to tell that he should hijack an airplane; and when a spy breaks the window of the airplane to throw off a cargo of radium using parachutes for Dr. Daka's men. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "Batman"
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis is the first filmed appearance of Batman.
- ErroresAt the end of Chapter 2, as Batman is battling with the thugs, his cape is ripped off and thrown to the floor. After a brief cutaway to Alfred waiting in the car, it is back on his shoulders with no apparent break in the action.
- Citas
Alfred Pennyworth: How many did I kill?
Bruce Wayne: Seven.
Alfred Pennyworth: But there were only four of the ruffians.
Richard Grayson: You killed three of them twice.
Alfred Pennyworth: Where are the bodies?
Bruce Wayne: We threw them out the window.
- Créditos curiososThis serial was promoted under the titles "The Batman", "The Bat Man" and "Bat Man". The actual title on the beginning of each chapter was simply "Batman".
- Versiones alternativasFilmed at the height of the Second World War, this serial originally featured a large amount of racist dialogue. A later reissue (released on video by Goodtimes) maintains the fact the villain is Japanese, but otherwise features new narration and dialogue which substitutes less-racist terminology.
- ConexionesEdited into The Three Stooges Follies (1974)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Batman?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución4 horas 20 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1