The Masked Marvel
The Masked Marvel
NR | 06 November 1943 (USA)
The Masked Marvel Trailers

A team of two-fisted insurance investigators (one of whom disguises himself as The Masked Marvel) endeavor to discover and thwart the loathsome saboteur Sakima.

Reviews
oscar-35

*Spoiler/plot- 1943, a Japanese spy ring threatens The US war production and the Masked Marvel and police fight to keep war production going. When a wave of sabotage masterminded by infamous Japanese agent, Sakima, threatens America's was effort, The Masked Marvel fearless enemy of spies and saboteurs leaps into action thwarting the subversives at every turn.*Special Stars- William Forrest, Louise Curie *Theme- USA wins again with right and might.*Based on- Historic and real war sabotage fears during WW2.*Trivia/location/goofs- Relying on a gambit used in the 1939 serial, The Lone Ranger, the Masked Marvel was secretly one of four insurance investigators, whose identity was not revealed until the closing minutes of serial #12. Through a clerical error sensational stuntman, Tom Steele the man actually behind the mask was never given any official billing for his effort in this film. Theater serial film release, There is some objectionable use of racial stereotypes and violence.*Emotion- An above 'par' Republic Studio WW2 espionage thriller with Japanese secret agents threatening the US war production.

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rudge49

In 1966 or so during the "camp"craze, the 1943 Columbia serial of "Batman" was released to ride the publicity generated by the Batman-TV program. (As an aside, as a True Believer I quickly tired of that program, haven't watched it since) Republic edited several of its much better made serials into 2 hour or so movies, sold them in syndication. Among the ones I remember were "Fighting Devil Dogs", "The Invisible Monster", "Manhunt of Mystery Island" and of course "The Masked Marvel" My mother joked that the actors hats seemed to be stapled to their heads, I later learned that they wore elastic bands so you couldn't tell it was a stuntman and not an actor, if in a fight scene one of the performers' hat came off he was a stuntman all along. Sort of a screen convention of the time. That said, this is one of the best wartime serials, I occasionally needed an adult to explain some of the wartime reference-the gas rationing stamps that the Marvel uses to track down Mace's car, e.g.One sad bit of trivia, in Chapter One the actor David Bacon looks at a secret message dated September 13, 1943, he was murdered on September 13, 1943.

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BOB AUDET

If you were living in the 1940s or 50s you remember seeing the old Republic & Columbia serials each week at your local theatre...Well, sit back and enjoy the best of that bunch!!!Tom Steele (stuntman extraordinaire) is the man behind the mask who is trying to save the US from Japanese saboteurs during WW2. Gunfights...fist fights...car chases...We pay $8-$10 to see that now!! See what $0.25 got you on a Saturday afternoon!! Enjoy...enjoy...enjoy!!

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crow-34

Previously, I noticed that many times they changed the ending and not too cleverly. In chapter 8 when the Marvel took the dive off the roof the action the next week was different and obviously sneaky, not a true cliffhanger! Oh yes, the agent who knifed the thug in bed after he identifies the Marvel was the Marvel technically. Tom Steele played the assassin and of course was killed again in the car crash. He is as you know the man behind the mask in all the action scenes. If you watch closely you can identify his stance, body language and physical running attitude. He was never mentioned in the credits at all. Most curious.

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