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Captain America

  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 4h 4min
NOTE IMDb
5,2/10
1,2 k
MA NOTE
Lorna Gray and Dick Purcell in Captain America (1944)
Superhero Captain America battles the evil forces of the archvillain called The Scarab, who poisons his enemies and steals a secret device capable of destroying buildings by sound vibrations.
Lire trailer1:53
1 Video
37 photos
SuperheroActionAdventureSci-FiThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSuperhero Captain America battles the evil forces of the archvillain called The Scarab, who poisons his enemies and steals a secret device capable of destroying buildings by sound vibrations... Tout lireSuperhero Captain America battles the evil forces of the archvillain called The Scarab, who poisons his enemies and steals a secret device capable of destroying buildings by sound vibrations.Superhero Captain America battles the evil forces of the archvillain called The Scarab, who poisons his enemies and steals a secret device capable of destroying buildings by sound vibrations.

  • Réalisation
    • Elmer Clifton
    • John English
  • Scénario
    • Royal K. Cole
    • Ronald Davidson
    • Basil Dickey
  • Casting principal
    • Dick Purcell
    • Lorna Gray
    • Lionel Atwill
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,2/10
    1,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Elmer Clifton
      • John English
    • Scénario
      • Royal K. Cole
      • Ronald Davidson
      • Basil Dickey
    • Casting principal
      • Dick Purcell
      • Lorna Gray
      • Lionel Atwill
    • 25avis d'utilisateurs
    • 17avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:53
    Trailer

    Photos37

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux68

    Modifier
    Dick Purcell
    Dick Purcell
    • Captain America…
    Lorna Gray
    Lorna Gray
    • Gail Richards
    Lionel Atwill
    Lionel Atwill
    • Cyrus Maldor
    Charles Trowbridge
    Charles Trowbridge
    • Dryden
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • Randolph
    George J. Lewis
    George J. Lewis
    • Bart Matson
    John Davidson
    John Davidson
    • Gruber
    Norman Nesbitt
    • Newscaster
    Frank Reicher
    Frank Reicher
    • Lyman [Ch. 1]
    Hugh Sothern
    Hugh Sothern
    • Eldon Dodge [Chs. 2-5]
    Tom Chatterton
    Tom Chatterton
    • J.C. Henley [Chs. 6-8]
    Robert Frazer
    Robert Frazer
    • Clinton Lyman [Chs. 10-12]
    John Hamilton
    John Hamilton
    • G.F. Hillman [Chs. 13-14]
    Crane Whitley
    Crane Whitley
    • Dirk [Chs. 11-12]
    Edward Keane
    • Agent 33 [Ch. 15]
    John Bagni
    • Monk
    Jay Novello
    Jay Novello
    • Simms [Ch. 1]
    Sam Ash
    Sam Ash
    • Florist #2 [Ch. 1]
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Elmer Clifton
      • John English
    • Scénario
      • Royal K. Cole
      • Ronald Davidson
      • Basil Dickey
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs25

    5,21.2K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    5The Peacemaker

    Campy Show- Reminds Me of "Batman"

    According to marvel comics, a man was given extraordinary powers to fight Nazis during WWII. His arch-enemy, the Red Skull, was caught in an accident and perserved, while the hero himself was frozen in an ice cube. Both the heroes were revived, and Cap joined the avengers, who thawed him out (Austin Powers, anyone?. The Red Skull began a new criminal organisation. This is one of his adventures before being perserved. Like the 60s "Batman", some of his escapes from death are a bit cheezy, but they later got a bit less corny. It tells how he battles the Scarab, a villian who first murders with "The Purple Death", later steals a machine to revive corpses, and tries to rob a bank with a remote controlled armour car. At least better than the 70s movies of Cap!
    Shield-3

    The Adventures of Captain Dad

    In the 1940s, every studio had at least one genre they excelled at. Universal had horror films, Warner Brothers had crime dramas and social commentaries, MGM had lavish musicals and costume dramas. Republic Studios was near the bottom of the barrel, but they had something they did better than anyone else: serials, weekly chapterplays where the heroes faced a deadly peril at the end of each episode. No one did them better than Republic. They had the best writing, music, special effects, stuntmen, and these factors added up to the best serials of all time: `Zorro's Fighting Legion,' `The Lone Ranger,' `The Adventures of Captain Marvel,' `Spy Smasher,' and others.

    But by 1944, the Republic formula had become just that, formula. `Captain America' is a product of a studio and a genre in decline. While the movie is technically proficient and slickly produced, the thrill and excitement is gone.

    Any Captain America fan seeing this movie without prior warning is in for a shock: Republic was notorious for making arbitrary changes to characters, and Captain America had it worse than anyone. Instead of being Private Steve Rogers of the United States Army, now he was Grant Gardner, District Attorney of an unnamed American city. His trademark shield was gone, replaced by a mundane .38-caliber revolver. His sidekick, Bucky, was also missing, so Cap was assisted by an efficient secretary, Gail Richards (Lorna Grey). Most bizarre was ignoring the whole World War II angle – instead of having Captain America battle spies and saboteurs like he did in the comics, they had him battling a run-of-the-mill criminal mastermind, Cyrus Maldor (Lionel Atwill), alias the Scarab. It strikes me as an odd choice for an overtly patriotic hero in the middle of a world war, but…

    Dick Purcell does a good job as Grant Gardner / Captain America, although he wasn't the best physical match for the part. Most of the young, trim guys were off fighting the war, so instead you have the nicely-rounded Purcell in the tights. Sometimes he looks more like Captain Dad than Captain America, but Purcell still does a decent job. Lorna Grey makes a surprisingly sexy sidekick (I can imagine younger moviegoers in 1944 lamenting Cap hanging out with a girl instead of his pal Bucky, while the slightly older audience would see the improvement). Lionel Atwill is appropriately scheming and menacing, but his climactic fistfight with Captain America stretches credibility a little too much.

    The two words that best describe `Captain America' are `competent' and `tired.' The serial goes through all the paces and delivers some excitement, but the classic Republic crispness, the snap, is gone. The serials would die slowly over the next twelve years, doomed to exhaustion and competition from television, but the glories of those years live on in memory.
    5redryan64

    Any resemblance to source material purely coincidental.

    There have been countless film adaptations of comic strip, comic book and pulp magazine adventures. This has been true for the last 60 years or so. Hence, we have seen FLASH GORDON,BUCK ROGERS,TIM TYLER'S LUCK, JUNGLE JIM,THE SHADOW,THE SPIDER,SUPERMAN,CAPTAIN MARVEL,BATMAN and even such minor leaguers as CONGO BILL,TEX GRANGER and THE VIGILANTE (among many others)were seen on the silver screen matinée bill.

    In the 30's,40's and 50's most of these were not produced as feature films, but rather in the form of the serial, AKA the chapter-play or cliffhanger. This was before the arrival of Television as the dominant media. All of the studios involved in sound serials at the time (Republic, Universal and Columbia)acquired rights to do some of these features as part of their serial output.

    In 1944 Republic brought us the adventures of CAPTAIN America. One can only imagine that the juvenile audience of that time were highly excited in the expectation of CAPTAIN America being on the screen, as well in comic books published by Timley Publications (later known as Atlas and still later Marvel Comics).

    Indeed, CAPTAIN America was the first Timley/Atlas/Marvel feature to be so adapted, but what happened? We all knew that C.A. was in reality Army Private Steve Rogers, a former 4F recruit who was transformed into a man of great physical power and physique (tho not super powered).Steve Rogers was to be the proto type, the first of an army of former 4F's. He had been a sort of human guinea pig for a kind of super vitamin injected into him (later accounts said a pill was used), in order to make him into the type of red-blooded fighting man we needed for World War II. (Did this foreshadow the emergence of anabolic steroids two decades later?) He wore a colorful costume, based on the American Flag. He had a juvenile assistant,"Bucky" (Bucky Barnes),who was much like Batman's Robin. He sported a shield, which functioned as a sort of giant boomerang-like weapon, as well as affording protection against enemy fire power.

    He fought the Axis agents, 5th Column Sabateurs and soldiers from Nazi Germany,Fascist Italy and Imperial Japan. He actually existed because of WWII, and other than the familiar figure of Uncle Sam on the recruiting posters or maybe Lady Columbia, no symbol was more representative of the USA than Captain America.

    So, what of the serial from Republic? Other than the title, there is very little in common with the comic page version. His identity in the film is District Attorney Grant Gardner. He has no connection to the military.He had no Bucky, no wings on cowl and a plain .38 caliber pistol instead of the multi-purpose shield. For that matter, you'd think that there was no war going on in this story line.

    This might have been okay as a serial if it was made in the pre-war years. It really should have been given a different title.
    513Funbags

    A typical serial for the time.

    While this serial is action packed and entertaining, it doesn't offer anything new or original.They basically just put the generic hero in a Captain America costume with no explanation why.This version of Captain America is a district attorney who carries a gun,because that makes sense.He uses the gun as Cap too and I really like that.He shoots and kills people, that's what America is all about.The story is about The Scarab, a secretly evil scientist who is killing other scientists.He keeps stealing weapons that can destroy buildings and Cap has to save the day.The first episode is 25 minutes but the rest are 12-15 minutes with 3 minutes from the previous episode.I'm sure a 3 minute recap is nice if you saw the last episode 7 days ago but when you watch them all at once, it's quite annoying.This is only for fans of the old serials.Captain America fans will be extremely disappointed.
    7flapdoodle64

    American Idle

    This serial has nothing to do with the original comic book Captain America but is still entertaining. Some people considered the star, Dick Purcell, to be pudgy but this is simply not so. He just had a more realistic body type than a male growth hormone guzzling freak like Sylvester Stallone. The men of Dick Purcell's era had survived the Great Depression and when they were hungry they ate meat and potatoes. Go take a look at your own gut sometime! Overall, Purcell made a pretty good serial hero, tough enough to do the job convincingly, a reasonably good actor, not wearing his angst and self doubt on his shirt sleeve like some modern sissy boy hero. While not as great as Buster Crabbe or Tom Tyler, he was better than Kirk Alyn (sorry, Kirk).

    This serial has lots of excellent fight scenes and great cliff hangers. Also, there is a sequence where Captain America rides the Republic motorcycle, which was also seen in 'Spy Smasher.' The villain, Lionel Atwill, is probably one of the best serial villains, perhaps even better than Charles Middleton as Emperor Ming. Perhaps it would have been wiser to do this in the usual 12 chapters, as opposed to 15, but then again, if I minded wasting my time, why would I watch these old serials? Overall, this is a pretty good serial, and as such it has a higher value for escapist fun than most modern super-heroic cinema. One significant criticism I will make, however, is the inexplicable exclusion of all references to WWII. When it's WWII out there, and you have Captain America, a character created to fight WWII, yet the story has nothing to do with WWII, well, that is an awfully big elephant in the room. It would be akin, say, to a nation that spends $200 million a day for 10 years on a war, with the public having no reliable knowledge of the causes, progress, or effects of the war.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In Captain America's origin story, a man named Steve Rogers--who is too weak and puny to fight in World War II-is injected with a Super-Soldier Serum and develops an enhanced physique, after which he becomes Captain America and does battle with the agents of Nazi Germany. This back story was rejected by Republic during the making of this serial, as it would have required costly retakes at the time. In the serial, Captain America's real name is Grant Gardner, he is the city's district attorney and his foe is the Scarab, aka Karl Maaldor, played by Lionel Atwill.
    • Gaffes
      Chapter one: You do not smell an unknown substance with your nose. You gently waft with your hand over the container, then sniff your cupped hand.
    • Citations

      Prof. Lyman: How did you find out about my vibrator?

    • Versions alternatives
      The film was originally released in fifteen 15 to 16-minute chapters (Chapter 1 ran 25 minutes), however, it has since been released in an omnibus fashion, running 4 hours and 4 minutes total.
    • Connexions
      Edited into J-Men Forever (1979)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Captain America?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 février 1944 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • Captain America 1944 YouTube
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Return of Captain America
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Republic Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Republic Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 222 906 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      4 heures 4 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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