IMDb RATING
7.2/10
221
YOUR RATING
A mysterious detective called The Masked Marvel battles Japanese saboteurs intent on blowing up America.A mysterious detective called The Masked Marvel battles Japanese saboteurs intent on blowing up America.A mysterious detective called The Masked Marvel battles Japanese saboteurs intent on blowing up America.
Ernie Adams
- Wilson
- (uncredited)
Sam Ash
- Reporter #2
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Made during the height of World War II, The Masked Marvel is 12 chapters of pure stunts and thrills. Despite the poor acting of the four leading men who are the "Marvel" suspects, the action-packed fights and rousing cliffhangers, plus the marvellous stunt work by Tom Steele and his team compensates.
The special effects by the Lydecker brothers are first-rate, as good as any major studio - if not better.
I have watched this serial a dozen times and still get excited and caught up in the adventure. If anyone wanted to begin a serial collection, this could do well as an introduction. It's Republic Pictures at the top of the studio's game.
The special effects by the Lydecker brothers are first-rate, as good as any major studio - if not better.
I have watched this serial a dozen times and still get excited and caught up in the adventure. If anyone wanted to begin a serial collection, this could do well as an introduction. It's Republic Pictures at the top of the studio's game.
10HKFAN
If you were living in the 1940s or 50s you remember seeing the old Republic & Columbia serials each week at your local theatre...
Well, sit back and enjoy the best of that bunch!!!
Tom Steele (stuntman extraordinaire) is the man behind the mask who is trying to save the US from Japanese saboteurs during WW2. Gunfights...fist fights...car chases...
We pay $8-$10 to see that now!! See what $0.25 got you on a Saturday afternoon!! Enjoy...enjoy...enjoy!!
Well, sit back and enjoy the best of that bunch!!!
Tom Steele (stuntman extraordinaire) is the man behind the mask who is trying to save the US from Japanese saboteurs during WW2. Gunfights...fist fights...car chases...
We pay $8-$10 to see that now!! See what $0.25 got you on a Saturday afternoon!! Enjoy...enjoy...enjoy!!
Perplexing? It is never revealed how the Masked Marvel acquired his aura.
He doesn't possess magical powers, super brains, or any particular crime fighting skills. He does sport a mask. But what for? What's he trying to hide? He's truly not much, if all, different from the other three good guys.
One thing is clear. Men's hats must have been surgically attached. No amount of fighting, falling, leaping out of cars or boats, can dislodge the hats.
It appeared all of the serials many pugilists were in tremendous physical condition. How many blows to the chin, back flips, kicks, hurling into walls could you take? They are simply indefatigible.
The Masked Marvel serial makes Steven Segal foes seem like pre-schoolers.
He doesn't possess magical powers, super brains, or any particular crime fighting skills. He does sport a mask. But what for? What's he trying to hide? He's truly not much, if all, different from the other three good guys.
One thing is clear. Men's hats must have been surgically attached. No amount of fighting, falling, leaping out of cars or boats, can dislodge the hats.
It appeared all of the serials many pugilists were in tremendous physical condition. How many blows to the chin, back flips, kicks, hurling into walls could you take? They are simply indefatigible.
The Masked Marvel serial makes Steven Segal foes seem like pre-schoolers.
This serial has a number of good moments and will be fun and enjoyable for serial fans but is not representative of the usually high quality for Republic serials of this era. First, the good things:
1. The fights and stunts, the efforts of Republic's cadre of expert stuntmen and fight choreographers, are all up the usual high standard for this studio.
2. The action and plot are fast moving, and the WWII background and references are interesting.
3. The cliff hangers and escapes are good.
4. Louise Currie playing Alice Hamilton, the plucky heroine whose father was murdered by the Axis spy ring. Ms. Currie was a good actress who never gained the fame she deserved, but did added a lot of class to this serial, and of course, the excellent 'Adventures of Captain Marvel'(1941). She is quite appealing as well as valiant in both of these serials, especially the 'Masked Marvel,' where she puts herself in mortal peril by going undercover, holds thugs at bay with a rifle, and escapes at least 2 death traps by herself, with no help from the eponymous hero.
5. The villains and thugs are pretty good actors. Of note is veteran character actor Johnny Arthur, playing the master villain Sakima. Mr. Arthur's performance is, overall, skilled and competent, and he seems sufficiently evil (though not nearly as evil as Ming the Merciless from 'Flash Gordon' or 'Dr. Daka' from the 1943 'Batman'). Note however, that like every other U.S. portrayal of a Japanese person from this period, racism is a huge factor.
But as much as Johnny Arthur is an asset, he is also a problem. That is because Mr. Arthur is going to be immediately recognizable as the actor who played the comic foil to the Little Rascals in a couple of the funniest 'Our Gang' comedies (he played Darla's father, Mr. Hood). Once an actor has been vanquished by Buckwheat and Alfalfa, it is hard believe he is a serious menace to our heroes. Mr. Arthur specialized in playing finicky, effeminate characters, and you get this sense that underneath the evil, Sakima is really just a sissy. This impression is reinforced when Sakima finds out that the Masked Marvel has discovered his hideout: Sakima pauses to pack his things!
Other problems:
1. The running gimmick, that the audience doesn't know who the real Marvel is, means that you can't imagine the man behind the Mask. The Marvel has comparatively few lines, is never photographed in close up, and never sticks around very long, so you really don't ever start rooting for him very much.
2. The 4 insurance dicks, one of whom is secretly the Marvel, never say enough lines, do enough or have enough close ups for the audience to want to root for any of them too much. One of the insurance dicks, David Bacon, is so wooden that Howard Hughes could have built a seaplane out of him. (Unfortunately, poor Mr. Bacon was murdered about a week after shooting on this serial wrapped. The crime was never solved!)
3. The direction shows a profound lack of imagination and only the most primitive understanding of the principles of cinema. While having access to one of the best stunt and fight crews in the world, it seldom occurs to the director to try different camera positions in the fights, and there are only 2 medium close up shots of the Masked Marvel's face in any of the fight scenes. It's too bad, because the Mask has a striking dramatic effect, one that would make the Marvel appear more formidable. You know, strike terror into the hearts of evildoers. But no, that seems never to occur to director Spencer Bennett, best known for his work making lousy postwar Columbia serials. How bad a director was Mr. Bennet? Based on the 3 Bennett serials I've seen, I'd say he was about ½ step above shooting Mexican porno movies in the desert. But who knows, maybe he actually did some Mexican porn As I said, this is worthwhile to the serial fan, but there are many other serials you should see before this.
1. The fights and stunts, the efforts of Republic's cadre of expert stuntmen and fight choreographers, are all up the usual high standard for this studio.
2. The action and plot are fast moving, and the WWII background and references are interesting.
3. The cliff hangers and escapes are good.
4. Louise Currie playing Alice Hamilton, the plucky heroine whose father was murdered by the Axis spy ring. Ms. Currie was a good actress who never gained the fame she deserved, but did added a lot of class to this serial, and of course, the excellent 'Adventures of Captain Marvel'(1941). She is quite appealing as well as valiant in both of these serials, especially the 'Masked Marvel,' where she puts herself in mortal peril by going undercover, holds thugs at bay with a rifle, and escapes at least 2 death traps by herself, with no help from the eponymous hero.
5. The villains and thugs are pretty good actors. Of note is veteran character actor Johnny Arthur, playing the master villain Sakima. Mr. Arthur's performance is, overall, skilled and competent, and he seems sufficiently evil (though not nearly as evil as Ming the Merciless from 'Flash Gordon' or 'Dr. Daka' from the 1943 'Batman'). Note however, that like every other U.S. portrayal of a Japanese person from this period, racism is a huge factor.
But as much as Johnny Arthur is an asset, he is also a problem. That is because Mr. Arthur is going to be immediately recognizable as the actor who played the comic foil to the Little Rascals in a couple of the funniest 'Our Gang' comedies (he played Darla's father, Mr. Hood). Once an actor has been vanquished by Buckwheat and Alfalfa, it is hard believe he is a serious menace to our heroes. Mr. Arthur specialized in playing finicky, effeminate characters, and you get this sense that underneath the evil, Sakima is really just a sissy. This impression is reinforced when Sakima finds out that the Masked Marvel has discovered his hideout: Sakima pauses to pack his things!
Other problems:
1. The running gimmick, that the audience doesn't know who the real Marvel is, means that you can't imagine the man behind the Mask. The Marvel has comparatively few lines, is never photographed in close up, and never sticks around very long, so you really don't ever start rooting for him very much.
2. The 4 insurance dicks, one of whom is secretly the Marvel, never say enough lines, do enough or have enough close ups for the audience to want to root for any of them too much. One of the insurance dicks, David Bacon, is so wooden that Howard Hughes could have built a seaplane out of him. (Unfortunately, poor Mr. Bacon was murdered about a week after shooting on this serial wrapped. The crime was never solved!)
3. The direction shows a profound lack of imagination and only the most primitive understanding of the principles of cinema. While having access to one of the best stunt and fight crews in the world, it seldom occurs to the director to try different camera positions in the fights, and there are only 2 medium close up shots of the Masked Marvel's face in any of the fight scenes. It's too bad, because the Mask has a striking dramatic effect, one that would make the Marvel appear more formidable. You know, strike terror into the hearts of evildoers. But no, that seems never to occur to director Spencer Bennett, best known for his work making lousy postwar Columbia serials. How bad a director was Mr. Bennet? Based on the 3 Bennett serials I've seen, I'd say he was about ½ step above shooting Mexican porno movies in the desert. But who knows, maybe he actually did some Mexican porn As I said, this is worthwhile to the serial fan, but there are many other serials you should see before this.
In 1966 or so during the "camp"craze, the 1943 Columbia serial of "Batman" was released to ride the publicity generated by the Batman-TV program. (As an aside, as a True Believer I quickly tired of that program, haven't watched it since) Republic edited several of its much better made serials into 2 hour or so movies, sold them in syndication. Among the ones I remember were "Fighting Devil Dogs", "The Invisible Monster", "Manhunt of Mystery Island" and of course "The Masked Marvel" My mother joked that the actors hats seemed to be stapled to their heads, I later learned that they wore elastic bands so you couldn't tell it was a stuntman and not an actor, if in a fight scene one of the performers' hat came off he was a stuntman all along. Sort of a screen convention of the time. That said, this is one of the best wartime serials, I occasionally needed an adult to explain some of the wartime reference-the gas rationing stamps that the Marvel uses to track down Mace's car, e.g.
One sad bit of trivia, in Chapter One the actor David Bacon looks at a secret message dated September 13, 1943, he was murdered on September 13, 1943.
One sad bit of trivia, in Chapter One the actor David Bacon looks at a secret message dated September 13, 1943, he was murdered on September 13, 1943.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough there were two characters that appeared in the comics of the day that bore the name The Masked Marvel, this character was a Republic Pictures creation.
- GoofsNear the end of the first chapter, the Masked Marvel falls off a large fuel storage tank onto a canvas-top truck parked on the ground below. The stunt is "performed" by a dummy, whose hand catches on a bracing girder along the side of the tank, ripping its entire arm out of its coat sleeve.
- ConnectionsEdited into Sakima and the Masked Marvel (1966)
- How long is The Masked Marvel?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Masked Marvel
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime3 hours 17 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Derrière le masque noir (1943) officially released in Canada in English?
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