Manhunt of Mystery Island
Claire Forrest seeks her kidnapped scientist father, hidden somewhere on Mystery Island. He is held and forced to work on diabolical inventions by Captain Mephisto, a costumed villain.
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- Cast:
- Richard Bailey , Linda Stirling , Roy Barcroft , Kenne Duncan , Forrest Taylor , Forbes Murray , Jack Ingram
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Reviews
That was an excellent one.
I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
15 episodes of looking for Linda Stirling's father on a small island? Too bad the plot is so thin, with each chapter having the barest hint of story, merely as a quick prelude to fights, fights and more fights. The cast is so small that almost every chapter has one or two fights between the dork hero, Richard Bailey, and Kenne Duncan, as the main henchman,(here in one of his biggest roles before his Ed Wood days) and frequently a threeway with Roy Barcroft (Captain Mephisto).Surprisingly, the serial really moves along, with the action scenes (directed by the Great Yak--Yakima Canutt, who finally gets directing credit this time) and cliff hangers exciting and holding your interest. The fun part in watching all the sets getting destroyed during the fights is guessing when any piece of vertical furniture (including filing cabinets, bunk beds or bookcases)is going to get knocked over and smashed. Great leaping and throwing of objects, and total destruction of rooms! Way to go, Yak!Since this is Republic in the mid forties, we expect a few jump out of the car before it goes over the cliff cheap chapter endings, but we get several interesting variations on Republic's stock of cliff hanger endings. In many of them, Linda Stirling herself saves the hero, and in several chapters shoots a gun! She certainly shows confidence in her athleticism after having done such a good job in "The Tiger Woman" (1944) and "Zorro's Black Whip" (1944). In fact, in the last chapter, she kills Mephisto!Not too bad, considering what little they had to work with, but still only four stars.
Caught this one on TV in its TV-movie form in 1966, now it is in my collection. Roy Barcroft considered this one his favorite, I can see why, he gets to play a villain who can disappear into a completely different body, how's that for a disguise. Contains one of the all time great villain's quotes. Captain Mephisto explains to the Kenne Duncan character how he transforms from his secret identity into Captain Mephisto. When the latter responds, "Oh I understand" Captain Mephisto says "If I thought you understood I'd kill you!" How's that for villainy? Top stuntman Dale Van Sickel doubling for Roy Barcroft, the usual top notch stunt work by the Lydecker brothers, non stop action, an intriguing if far fetched plot. About the only complaint I have is that I've never seen it on the Big Screen.
A scientist working on a remote control invention is kidnapped and brought to an island, by a mysterious Captain Mephisto, who used to be governor of the island in days when it was a penal colony. In reality, Mephisto is one of the four ruling members of the island who uses a transformation chair which changes the enigmatic member into the evil pirate. Investigator Lance Reardon, who along with the scientist's daughter Claire Forrest, searches out the captive scientist in this thrilling chapterplay. In 1945, serials were on the way out, but this easily ranks up with any from the golden age of the genre. Co-director Yakima Canutt adds plenty of action and the far fetched plot surprisingly becomes incredibly intriguing. 15 episodes. In terms of serials, 10 out of 10.
Top of the line serial from Republic. Great cliffhanger endings, flagging only slightly in later chapters. Bailey is an effective (if slightly dorky looking) hero, Linda Stirling is lovely and gets involved in the action (although she does get knocked cold every other chapter), and Duncan is an effective henchman. Roy Barcroft, as Captain Mephisto, steals the show. Barcroft considered this role his best and personal favorite, and it's easy to see why: he obviously relishes his villainy, looks great in the costume, and throws himself into the fights. All around classic from the Republic thrill factory.