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Radar Patrol vs. Spy King

Radar Patrol vs. Spy King (1949)

November. 23,1949
|
5.2
|
NR
| Action

The war lords of a potential enemy of the US has the spy ring, led by John Baroda, the Spy King and his aide Nitra, sabotaging the plans for a vast defense system of radar stations along the American borders. Radar Defense Bureau operative Chris Calvert comes to the rescue of a brilliant radar scientist, Joan Hughes, who has been kidnapped by Baroda henchmen in chapter 1 ("The Fatal Fog"), and the two battle together before putting an end to the Spy King in the aptly-named chapter 12, "Day of Reckoning".

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Maidexpl
1949/11/23

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

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Livestonth
1949/11/24

I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible

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Humaira Grant
1949/11/25

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Mathilde the Guild
1949/11/26

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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aimless-46
1949/11/27

"Radar Patrol vs Spy King" is your standard late 40's Republic Serial. It is composed of 12 "High-Voltage Episodes" and stars Kirk Alyn-the king of Saturday matinée serials and the first screen Superman. Why Alyn got so much work is a bigger mystery than anything found in his serials-he had no special talent and his appearance was not exactly leading man quality. Maybe his family was financing these things.Unlike many of these serials, "Radar Patrol vs Spy King" does not feature any exotic locations (it looks like they used the same southern California valley used for "Lassie" and "The Real McCoys") or any exciting apparatus. Radar (apparently still an exciting idea in 1949) is the focus the espionage in this story. Plus the bad-guy, (played quite well by John Merton), has some kind of hokey looking ray gun. Assisting the Radar Patrol is Anthony Warde who also did a good job as Killer Kane in the Buck Rogers serials.One interesting thing is that the writers based much of the plot on the concept that it was possible to trace a radar beam back to its source, an idea that was the major vulnerability of tracking systems.The best reason to watch this is the presence of Jean Dean as the heroine. Dean was a former Vargas model (for his redheads) and Esquire calendar girl of limited thespian talent but breathtaking beauty. Although she has a lot of screen time the director uses her almost entirely in wide shots and there are few good close-ups of her face. Why they would cast her and then not use her to their best advantage is a puzzle but it probably has something to do with the cheap way these things were actually produced. Most scenes were filmed once as wide master shots. Then a small fraction of the action was filmed closer and cut into the master. They could knock out a lot of stuff in a short time doing it this way.Watching Jean Dean closely revealed some other stuff about the production method. Although the story takes place over about a two-week period, Dean wears the same plaid suit for 90% or the serial. During this time she jumps out of a moving car (twice), a speeding truck, and an airplane. She is in several fights and is knocked around many times. That suit really takes a beating but it looks fine at the end. The same goes for the other actors. This was not because of a lack of money for wardrobe. At each location they shot everything for all 12 episodes at the same time. Much of this stuff was interchangeable and limiting each actor to one outfit minimized one type of continuity issue during the editing process.

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