@diddymuck Oh, so you notice that as well. Serial scriptwriters borrowed ideas from each other all time. In 1946, Republic Pictures released "The :Phantom Rider" about a white man who adopts the garb of a mythical Indian warrior to combat outlaws trespassing on Indian reservations. A few months later, Universal came out with "The Scarlet Horseman," which also had a Indian mythical hero.
there's a blatant similarity to the scenes of most serials. There's the lakeside scene, the garage scene, the elevator, the airplane, the cave, the out of control auto, and of course the exploding building.
@diddymuck Oh, so you notice that as well. Serial scriptwriters borrowed ideas from each other all time. In 1946, Republic Pictures released "The :Phantom Rider" about a white man who adopts the garb of a mythical Indian warrior to combat outlaws trespassing on Indian reservations. A few months later, Universal came out with "The Scarlet Horseman," which also had a Indian mythical hero.
MrFrontrowkid 7 months ago
there's a blatant similarity to the scenes of most serials. There's the lakeside scene, the garage scene, the elevator, the airplane, the cave, the out of control auto, and of course the exploding building.
diddymuck 1 year ago
I really like the Automobiles of this era.
Whitewalls were REALLY whitewalls. :p
bluemensch 1 year ago
Ahh man(heavy sigh).... I can't wait ;]
abomb13 2 years ago