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The Fighting Devil Dogs (1938) is a 12-Chapter Republic Movie Serial starring Lee Powell and Herman Brix, the latter better known by his later stage name, Bruce Bennett. It was directed by William Witney and John English. While not often considered one of the best serials ever made, as it contains a lot of stock footage and two recap chapters, it is famous for its main villain, The Lightning—the very first costumed supervillain[2].
[edit] PlotThe Masked Mystery Villain, The Lightning, seeks to conquer the world with his arsenal of advanced electrical weaponry. Opposing him are two Marines, Lt Tom Grayson and Lt Frank Corby. Lt Grayson has a special reason to defeat The Lightning as he killed his father, but first they must discover The Lightning's true identity. [edit] Cast
[edit] ProductionThe Fighting Devil Dogs was budgeted at $94,656 although the final negative cost was $92,569 (a $2,087, or 2.2%, under spend) making it one of only three pre-war Republic serials to be produced under budget.[1] It was the cheapest Republic serial of 1938 and the second cheapest of all Republic serials.[3][1] It has two recap chapters rather than the usual one (or sometimes none), in which the entire plot of the serial so far is repeated, and makes extensive use of stock footage. The cheapest Republic serial[1] was The Vigilantes Are Coming (1936) at $87,655, while the next cheapest after The Fighting Devil Dogs is Undersea Kingdom (also 1936) at $99,222. It was filmed between 10 March and 29 March 1938.[1] The serial's production number was 793.[1] One of the directors, William Witney, believed this to be one of the worst of the serials he ever made.[4] The Lightning's Flying wing was taken from the earlier Dick Tracy serial.[5] Aviation was one of the most popular serial genres of the early 1930s, along with Westerns and Jungle serials. Aviation films were even expected to displace Westerns as the most popular genre but science fiction took over instead. Stedman claims that the science fiction Flying Wing in this serial was the beginning of the process that killed interest in ordinary aviation.[6][7] [edit] Release[edit] TheatricalThe Fighting Devil Dogs' official release date is 28 May 1938, although this is actually the date the sixth chapter was made available to film exchanges.[1] A 69-minute feature film version, created by editing the serial footage together, was released on 29 January 1943. It was one of fourteen feature films Republic made from their serials.[1] [edit] TelevisionIn the early 1950s, The Fighting Devil Dogs was one of fourteen Republic serials edited into a television series. It was broadcast in six 26½-minute episodes.[1] The Fighting Devil Dogs was also one of twenty-six Republic serials re-released as a film on television in 1966. The title of the film was changed to Torpedo of Doom. This version was cut down to 100-minutes in length.[1] [edit] Critical receptionThe Fighting Devil Dogs is, in Cline's opinion, one of the best mystery serials ever released, with a "colourful" mystery villain, "stirring" musical score and "magnificent" editing. He also notes that it is "apparently one of the least costly" serials ever released, with two recap chapters and stock footage taken from newsreels and earlier serial releases.[5] He states that is should be included in "any list of the ten best sound serials of all."[8] [edit] Chapter titles
[edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
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