The Vigilante
The Vigilante | |
---|---|
Movie Poster | |
Directed by | Wallace Fox |
Produced by | Sam Katzman |
Written by |
Lewis Clay Arthur Hoerl George H. Plympton |
Starring |
Ralph Byrd Ramsay Ames Lyle Talbot George Offerman Jr. |
Music by |
Mischa Bakaleinikoff musical director Sidney Cutner |
Cinematography | Ira H. Morgan |
Edited by | Earl Turner |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 15 chapters (285 min) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Vigilante (1947) was the 33rd serial released by Columbia Pictures. It was based on the comic book cowboy, The Vigilante, who first appeared in Action Comics, better known as DC Comics, and starred Ralph Byrd, well known for his central role in the Dick Tracy serials. It was his last ever serial appearance.
Plot
The Vigilante, a masked government agent, is assigned to investigate the case of the "100 Tears of Blood", a cursed string of rare blood red pearls sought by a gang led by the unknown X-1 that may have been smuggled into the country.
Greg Sanders (Sanders at that time, later changed to Saunders in the comics), in his civilian guise as an actor, is filming a western on George Pierce's ranch. Pierce is a wealthy rancher and nightclub owner. When Prince Hamil arrives at the ranch, he gives a horse each to Saunders, Pierce, Captain Reilly, Tex Collier and Betty Winslow. But an outlaw gang soon attacks, attempting to steal all five horses. It turns out that each horse has twenty of the pearls hidden in their shoes (five in each) in secret compartments. Edging closer, Sanders learns that Prince Hamil's servant stole the diamonds from his master and smuggled them in on the horses with the intention of passing them on to X-1.
Cast
- Ralph Byrd as Greg Sanders/The Vigilante
- Ramsay Ames as Betty Winslow, rodeo star
- Lyle Talbot as George Pierce
- George Offerman Jr. as Stuff, The Vigilante's sidekick
- Robert Barron as Prince Hamil, dignitary of Aravania. Barron was wrongly listed on-screen as Prince Hassan but referred to as Hamil.
- Hugh Prosser as Captain Reilly, highway patrol officer
- Jack Ingram as Silver/henchman X-2
- Eddie Parker as Doc/henchman X-3
- Tiny Brauer as Thorne/henchman X-9
Production
The Vigilante was originally a comic book character whose first appearance was in Action Comics (Issue #42, November 1941).[1] He was a singing-cowboy radio performer who doubled as a motorcycle-riding crime-fighter along with a pre-teen Chinese boy, Stuff the Chinatown Kid.
In the serial version, Stuff became a white, draft-age sidekick played by George Offerman Jr. Ralph Byrd was cast as the Vigilante. Director Wallace Fox makes a cameo appearance as the director filming Greg Sanders' movie at George Pierce's ranch.
Chapter titles
- The Vigilante Rides Again
- Mystery of the White Horses
- Double Peril
- Desperate Flight
- In the Gorilla's Cage
- Battling the Unknown
- Midnight Rendezvous
- Blasted to Eternity
- The Fatal Flood
- Danger Ahead
- X-1 Closes In
- Death Rides the Rails
- The Trap that Failed
- Closing In
- The Secret of the Skyroom
Source:[2]
References
- ↑ "Action #42 at the Grand Comics Database". Comics.org. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
- ↑ Cline, William C. (1984). "Filmography". In the Nick of Time. McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 245. ISBN 0-7864-0471-X.
External links
- The Vigilante at the Internet Movie Database
- The Vigilante at AllMovie
- The Vigilante article at Todd Gault's Movie Serial Experience
- Comic Book Profiles: The Vigilante - the 1947 Movie Serial