Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This page was last edited on 29 September 2016, at 04:59 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Undersea Kingdom (1936) is a Republic Pictures 12 chapter film serial released in response to Universal's Flash Gordon. [2] It was the second of the sixty-six serials made by Republic. In 1966, the serial was edited into a 100-minute television film titled Sharad of Atlantis .
Episodes 1–4: Survival status unclear. [3] Episodes 5–8, 10, 11: Museum of Modern Art [4] Episode 9: Library of Congress [4] Episode 12: Survival status unclear [3] Other sources indicate a print exists yet provide no specifics [5] 1913 Selig Polyscope Company: The Adventures of Kathlyn: 13 Adventure Francis J. Grandon: Kathlyn Williams ...
This is a list of film serials by studio, separated into those released by each of the five major studios, and the remaining minor studios. The five major studios produced the greater number of serials. Of these the main studios are considered to be Columbia Pictures, Universal Pictures, and Republic Pictures. All three were active during the ...
The name of the serial's main character was changed from Commando Cody to the more prosaic Larry Martin when the shooting schedule began. This lead character renaming happened after the footage was shot for the first three episodes of Republic's proposed science fiction syndicated television series, Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe ...
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
January 4, 1958: Satan's Satellites: Feature film version of the serial Zombies of the Stratosphere: January 7, 1958: Missile Monsters: Feature film version of the serial Flying Disc Man from Mars: January 10, 1958: Outcasts of the City: February 7, 1958: Scotland Yard Dragnet: distribution only February 28, 1958: The Notorious Mr. Monks: March ...
Serials produced after World War II were more economy-minded, with the running times slashed from 20 minutes per episode to 13 minutes, and with the cliffhanger endings borrowed from older Republic serials and features. The studio also stopped licensing expensive comic-strip and radio properties, and instead created generic cops-and-robbers ...