The Video Rangers, teenage assistants to the World Security Guardians, maintain peace in a distant future, battling villains like the Astroidal Alliance, Nargola, Mork, Kul, Clysmok, and the... Read allThe Video Rangers, teenage assistants to the World Security Guardians, maintain peace in a distant future, battling villains like the Astroidal Alliance, Nargola, Mork, Kul, Clysmok, and the nefarious Dr. Pauli.The Video Rangers, teenage assistants to the World Security Guardians, maintain peace in a distant future, battling villains like the Astroidal Alliance, Nargola, Mork, Kul, Clysmok, and the nefarious Dr. Pauli.
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
10saronne1
I was about 11- watched the show every night; one night my mother turned the TV off in the middle of an episode- JUST when an imposter was about to be found out;
Both Permes and the imposter had British accents, but the imposter said "It's just your imagin EYE tion- Cockney- which gave him away. This is where my mother turned it off- I was apopleptic LOL
The next day I asked several kids at school, but no one knew what happened. I never found out. A few years ago I ran into someone who knew the actor who played Capt Video- he was still alive- he asked him what had happened for me but he couldn't remember!
Please- someone- tell me what happened? I am 79 now and it still gets to me- maybe the OCD that comes with Tourette's (sigh). I begged my mother to let me continue watching it- I still don't understand why she turned it off.
Before that,,I wasn't allowed to listen to Sergeant Preston of theYukon-evidently the tics manifesting caused the doctor to think it was better for me to stop listening- I was 10. It really upset me not to be able to listen to it with my friends but at least it wasn't turned off in the middle of an exciting episode LOL
The next day I asked several kids at school, but no one knew what happened. I never found out. A few years ago I ran into someone who knew the actor who played Capt Video- he was still alive- he asked him what had happened for me but he couldn't remember!
Please- someone- tell me what happened? I am 79 now and it still gets to me- maybe the OCD that comes with Tourette's (sigh). I begged my mother to let me continue watching it- I still don't understand why she turned it off.
Before that,,I wasn't allowed to listen to Sergeant Preston of theYukon-evidently the tics manifesting caused the doctor to think it was better for me to stop listening- I was 10. It really upset me not to be able to listen to it with my friends but at least it wasn't turned off in the middle of an exciting episode LOL
Captain Video, flying fearlessly from planet to planet, protecting the universe from evil, introducing a little child to space ships, exotic peoples and worlds, robots, science, and science fiction. What a legacy to the world! Captain Video is the pioneer who made possible Star Trek and Star Wars and countless other flights of the imagination.
The stories were hokey, the special effects were nonexistent, even the Polaris and the Galaxy were obviously little plastic models with sparks coming out their exhausts, but none of that was important. The courage and the excitement of traveling to strange places and meeting exotic people and bravely defending the weak and the helpless were the things that mattered, the things that lasted through the years, the things that inspired the future.
The stories were hokey, the special effects were nonexistent, even the Polaris and the Galaxy were obviously little plastic models with sparks coming out their exhausts, but none of that was important. The courage and the excitement of traveling to strange places and meeting exotic people and bravely defending the weak and the helpless were the things that mattered, the things that lasted through the years, the things that inspired the future.
Who would have thought that a space adventure show could be done with (1) no special effects budget, (2) no prop department, (3) no wardrobe department, (4) sets that generally consisted of blank walls, (5) no space suits or space ships, and (6) a minimum of action? Well, Captain Video for its first year fit these conditions precisely! Yet it became wildly popular. It was more like radio than television, with the active imaginations of the young viewers having to fill in the many blanks. It would have probably continued to be broadcast indefinitely, 30 to 15 min per day, 3 to 5 days per week, if the always underfunded DuMont network had not gone bankrupt in 1955.
In 1949, "Captain Video" started off slowly on the fledgeling television airwaves, but CV soon became the rip-roaring space adventure anthology that is still so well remembered today.
The series' producers, blessed with CV's New York origination, had top Broadway actors with which to work, and scripts by famous playwrights and science-fiction writers. The result was an on-screen synergy of vibrant performances and still-classic storytelling which more than compensated for the stagelike sets from the chronically-impoverished Du Mont Television Network. (In my view, those limited sets were actually a blessing to the series' quality, though it must hardly have seemed that way then.)
Al Hodge, the stolid hero-scientist, and Don Hastings, the trusty young aide, were perfectly cast as traditional role-models in the classic sense.
As the series progressed and matured throughout the early 1950s, adult fan-viewers were as captivated by the CV sagas as the younger audience for which they had been intended. The series developed a huge nightly following, which would have been greater still had Du Mont controlled more airspace than the relatively small number of channels from which it did broadcast.
The demise of the Du Mont Television Network ended the popular series ... and then the tragic destruction of most of the Captain Video kinescopes for their silver content ended any hopes for a rediscovery by younger, newer audiences. The few remaining now-out-of-context CV episodes can only hint at the great on-screen chemistry that was "Captain Video and His Video Rangers".
That the series is still fondly remembered and talked about, even by those far too young to have seen it, can be termed a tribute.
One other thing: many CV scripts and story concepts remain. And I hold the hope that someday, some imaginative producer may latch onto the idea of a revived retelling of the legend of the "master of space and hero of science": Captain Video.
The series' producers, blessed with CV's New York origination, had top Broadway actors with which to work, and scripts by famous playwrights and science-fiction writers. The result was an on-screen synergy of vibrant performances and still-classic storytelling which more than compensated for the stagelike sets from the chronically-impoverished Du Mont Television Network. (In my view, those limited sets were actually a blessing to the series' quality, though it must hardly have seemed that way then.)
Al Hodge, the stolid hero-scientist, and Don Hastings, the trusty young aide, were perfectly cast as traditional role-models in the classic sense.
As the series progressed and matured throughout the early 1950s, adult fan-viewers were as captivated by the CV sagas as the younger audience for which they had been intended. The series developed a huge nightly following, which would have been greater still had Du Mont controlled more airspace than the relatively small number of channels from which it did broadcast.
The demise of the Du Mont Television Network ended the popular series ... and then the tragic destruction of most of the Captain Video kinescopes for their silver content ended any hopes for a rediscovery by younger, newer audiences. The few remaining now-out-of-context CV episodes can only hint at the great on-screen chemistry that was "Captain Video and His Video Rangers".
That the series is still fondly remembered and talked about, even by those far too young to have seen it, can be termed a tribute.
One other thing: many CV scripts and story concepts remain. And I hold the hope that someday, some imaginative producer may latch onto the idea of a revived retelling of the legend of the "master of space and hero of science": Captain Video.
Captain Video and His Video Rangers is one of the many television series that the "forgotten" fourth network Dumont is most notable for. First airing in 1949, it may be the first popular science fiction show in North America, if not the world, predating Star Trek, The Twilight Zone, and the two shows that begun as a result.
When Captain Video was broadcasted, it was an unbelievable success. Both children and adults associated with the show and it gave Dumont an audience for once. The show was filmed live, giving way for improvisation, about five or six days a week. This provided >1500 episodes in the shows six year run, which sounds daily considering there were only about 2130 days in that time. This statistic is also unfortunate as it gives way to the fact that almost none of those episodes may ever be seen, but maybe it wasn't too disappointing.
Even with the attention the show got, the show was made on a shoestring budget. Some later science fiction shows like Star Trek or Battlestar Galactica showed how heavy budgets may defeat audience reception, but Captain Video persisted despite several difficulties. The original actors who played Captain Video and his nemesis Doctor Pauli left due to the low wages obtained and the stress produced from working on such a frequent show. In many of the early episodes, there is a moment where the camera zooms into a monitor that then shows, a western, in a science fiction show! These were taken from films that Dumont had purchased and decided to splice in in order to make the most of their purchase, despite having nothing to do with the story's plot. The show is not very cohesive at all but it may provide enjoying at times. Some later episodes were written by figures synonymous with the science fiction genre such as Arthur C. Clarke or Isaac Asimov, but it is very unlikely those episodes still exist.
As a result of Dumont's successor wiping, less than a hundred(or even half a hundred) episodes of Captain Video exist. Most surviving episodes are held in the UCLA Film and Television Archive but they have yet to release all of them. Currently, only four episodes from the show are available to be seen, all that is left so far of such a pioneer and forerunner of television history. Those episodes may be seen either on DVD or on the Internet, but their lack of quality and perhaps continuity leaves little to obtain from watching. There was also a movie serial produced by Columbia but that's another story. Overall, Captain Video is an interesting show when it comes to television history but it has little to show with its cheap quality and few episodes.
Did you know
- TriviaDuring the Vietnam War, American soldiers who were taken as Prisoners of War by the North Vietnamese were often interrogated and asked whom the American military leaders were. Reportedly, several POWs would respond with "Captain Video." The North Vietnamese interrogators, being unaware of the TV show, accepted this answer. This allowed the POWs to escape possible torture and avoid giving the identities of the real military leaders.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Television: The Race for Television (1988)
- SoundtracksOverture to The Flying Dutchman
by Richard Wagner
- How many seasons does Captain Video and His Video Rangers have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Captain Video and His Video Rangers (1949) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer