Daredevils of the Red Circle

Daredevils of the Red Circle
Daredevils of the Red Circle
Directed by William Witney
John English
Produced by Robert M. Beche
Written by Barry Shipman
Franklin Adreon
Rex Taylor
Ronald Davidson
Sol Shor
Starring Charles Quigley
Herman Brix
David Sharpe
Carole Landis
Miles Mander
Charles Middleton
Music by William Lava
Cinematography William Nobles
Editing by Edward Todd
William Thompson
Distributed by Republic Pictures
Release date(s) United States 10 June 1939 (serial)[1]
Early 1950s (TV)[1]
Austria March 1953
France 26 January 2002
Running time 12 chapters / 211 minutes (serial)[1]
6 26½-minute episodes (TV)[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $126,855 (negative cost: $126,118)[1]

Daredevils of the Red Circle (1939) is a 12-Chapter Republic Movie Serial starring Charles Quigley, David Sharpe, Herman Brix (better known under his subsequent stage name, Bruce Bennett) and Charles Middleton. It was directed by William Witney and John English and is often considered one of the better serials produced by Republic. The serial was the fourteenth of the sixty-six serials produced by the studio.

Contents

Plot

An escaped criminal, known as Harry Crowl, but preferring to be called by his prison number 39013 (pronounced Thirty Nine - O - Thirteen), seeks revenge on the man who sent him to prison, millionaire philanthropist Horace Granville. He kidnaps Granville, imprisoning him within his own house, and disguises himself to take Granville's place, as the frail old man in a clean room, necessary for his health. The only other person allowed past the glass barrier being his doctor. He then sets about methodically destroying everything Granville owns. When we enter the film, he has already destroyed a number of Granville properties, and has set his sights on the Granville Amusement Centre, at which a trio of acrobats is performing. The daredevils, Gene, Bert, and Tiny escape but Gene's kid brother is badly wounded in the blaze, and later dies of his injuries. Seeking revenge they take jobs as private investigators for the man they believe to be Horace Granville. Through a series of deadly traps, and with the help of a mysterious cloaked figure, known only as "The Red Circle", the daredevils begin to unravel the truth.

In the first chapter, we are introduced to all the above facts, and even shown the secret room within the Granville estates where 39013 is keeping the real Granville. He is kept in a cell, the exact duplicate of the one in which 39013 resided for his abruptly ended sentence. This room is trapped, so that in the event that 39013 does not return, a dripping reservoir will run dry. The loss of weight will tip the scale, causing deadly gas capsules to break upon the floor, killing Granville in a very short time. This causes him to spout the characteristic line, "You best hope I continue to live, Granville."

Cast

Main cast

Supporting cast

  • C. Montague Shaw as Malcolm, Horace Granville's doctor
  • Ben Taggart as Dixon, Horace Granville's manager
  • William Pagan as Landon, police chief
  • Corbet Morris as Klein, one of 39013's henchmen
  • Raymond Bailey as Stanley, Horace Granville's secretary and one of 39013's henchmen
  • Snowflake as Snowflake, black, comic-relief servant of Horace Granville
  • George Chesebro as Sheffield, one of 39013's henchmen
  • Ray Miller as Jeff, Horace Granville's nurse
  • Robert Winkler as Sammy Townley, Gene's younger brother
  • Stanley Price as Prof. Selden (uncredited)
  • "Tuffie", the dog

Production

Daredevils of the Red Circle was budgeted at $126,855 although the final negative cost was $126,118 (a $737, or 0.6%, under spend). It was the cheapest Republic serial of 1939 and one of only three pre-war serials to be made under budget. The other two were The Fighting Devil Dogs (1938) and Mysterious Doctor Satan (1940).[1]

It was filmed between 28 March and 28 April 1939.[1] The serial's production number was 897.[1]

Ironically, David Sharpe, who is generally considered to have been one of the greatest stuntmen in the movies, had to be doubled in action scenes by Jimmy Fawcett because he was playing a leading role, and the studio could not risk any production delays were Sharpe to suffer injury.

Release

Theatrical

Daredevils of the Red Circle's official release date is 10 June 1939, although this is actually the date the sixth chapter was made available to film exchanges.[1]

Television

In the early 1950s, Daredevils of the Red Circle was one of fourteen Republic serials edited into a television series. It was broadcast in six 26½-minute episodes.[1]

Chapter titles

  1. The Monstrous Plot (27 min 48s)
  2. The Mysterious Friend (16 min 41s)
  3. The Executioner (16 min 45s)
  4. Sabotage (16 min 38s)
  5. The Ray of Death (16 min 39s)
  6. Thirty Seconds to Live (16 min 39s)
  7. The Flooded Mine (16 min 42s)
  8. S.O.S. (16 min 40s)
  9. Ladder of Peril (16 min 39s)
  10. The Infernal Machine (16 min 36s)
  11. The Red Circle Speaks (16 min 39s) -- Re-Cap Chapter
  12. Flight to Doom (16 min 40s)

Source:[1][2]

Note: This was one of two 12-chapter serials released by Republic in 1939. The other was Zorro's Fighting Legion. Republic also released two 15-chapter serials in this year.


See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Mathis, Jack. Valley of the Cliffhangers Supplement. Jack Mathis Advertising. pp. 3, 10, 38-.39. ISBN 0-9632878-1-8. 
  2. ^ Cline, William C.. "Filmography". In the Nick of Time. McFarland & Company, Inc.. pp. 224–225. ISBN 078640471X. 

External links

Preceded by
The Lone Ranger Rides Again (1939)
Republic Serial
Daredevils of the Red Circle (1939)
Succeeded by
Dick Tracy's G-Men (1939)
Preceded by
The Lone Ranger Rides Again (1939)
Witney-English Serial
Daredevils of the Red Circle (1939)
Succeeded by
Dick Tracy's G-Men (1939)

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