Zorro Rides Again

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Zorro Rides Again
Directed by William Witney
John W English
Produced by Sol C Siegel
Written by Franklin Adreon
Morgan Cox
Ronald Davidson
John Rathmell
Barry Shipman
Johnston McCulley (original Zorro novel)
Starring John Carroll
Helen Christian
Reed Howes
Duncan Renaldo
Noah Berry
Richard Alexander
Music by Alberto Colombo
Walter Hirsch
Eddie Cherkose
Lou Handman
Cinematography William Nobles
Editing by Helene Turner
Edward Todd
Distributed by Republic Pictures
Release date(s) 20 November 1937 (serial)
22 September 1938 (film)
1950s (TV)
16 January 1959 (film)
Running time 12 chapters (212 min)
Country United States
Language English
Budget $98,110 (negative cost: $110,753)
Followed by Zorro's Fighting Legion (1939)
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

'Zorro Rides Again' (1937) is a 12-chapter Republic Movie serial. It was the eighth of the sixty-six Republic serials, the third with a western theme (a third of Republic's serials were westerns) and the last produced in 1937. The serial was directed by William Witney & John English and starred John Carroll as a modern descendant of the original Zorro. The plot is a fairly standard western storyline about a villain attempting to illicitly take valuable land (in this case a new railroad). The setting is a hybrid of modern (1930s) and western elements that was used occasionally in B-Westerns (such as the western feature films also produced by Republic).

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

In contemporary (for the 1937 production) California, villain J. A. Marsden aims to take over the California-Yucatan Railroad with the aid of his henchman El Lobo. The rightful owners, Joyce and Phillip Andrews, naturally object. Their parter, Don Manuel Vega summons his nephew, James Vega, to help them as he is the great grandson of the original Zorro, Don Diego de la Vega. He is disappointed, however, to find that his nephew is a useless fop (presumably Don Manuel had not paid too much attention to his family history).

Nevertheless, James Vega installs himself in the original Zorro's hideout and adopts the Zorro identity to defeat Marsden and El Lobo.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Cast

Zorro
Helen Christian as Joyce Andrews, An owner of the California-Yucatan Railroad
Reed Howes as Phillip Andrews, An owner of the California-Yucatan Railroad
Duncan Renaldo as Renaldo, Servant
Noah Beery as J. A. Marsden, Financier and villain
Richard Alexander as Brad 'El Lobo' Dace, Ruthless villain

[edit] Supporting Cast

John Carroll as James Vega, foppish nephew of Don Manuel Vega
Nigel De Brulier as Don Manuel Vega, partner with Joyce & Phillip Andrews in the California-Yucatan Railroad and uncle of James Vega
Robert Kortman as Trelliger, Henchman of El Lobo
Jack Ingram as Carter, Henchman of El Lobo
Roger Williams as Manning, Henchman of El Lobo
Edmund Cobb as Larkin, Henchman of El Lobo
Mona Rico as Carmelita, Renaldo's niece
Tom London as O'Shea
Harry Strang as O'Brien
Jerry Frank as Duncan, Pilot-henchman of El Lobo

[edit] Production

Zorro Rides Again was filmed between 8 September and 5 October 1937 under the working title Mysterious Don Miguel. The sixth chapter was released to film exchanges on 20 November 1937 (recorded as the release date for the serial). The serial was re-edited into a 68-minute movie version which was released 22 September 1938 and re-released 16 January 1959. Additionally, the serial was re-edited into a television series of six 26½-minute episodes in the early 1950s.

The serial was budgetted for $98,110 but went over-budget. The final negative cost was $110,753, going over budget by $12,643 (12.9%). If it had remained on budget it would have been the cheapest Republic serial produced that year (and third cheapest since Republic began making serials) but as it was The Painted Stallion (the other western serial of 1937) was made for less at $109,164.

[edit] Chapter titles

  1. Death from the Sky (29 min 41s)
  2. The Fatal Minute (18 min 1s)
  3. Juggernaut (16 min 18s)
  4. Unmasked (16 min 19s)
  5. Sky Pirate (16 min 54s)
  6. The Fatal Shot (16 min 32s)
  7. Burning Embers (15 min 30s)
  8. Plunge of Peril (17 min 10s)
  9. Tunnel of Terror (17 min 07s)
  10. Trapped (17 min 23s)
  11. Right of Way (15 min 47s)
  12. Retribution (15 min 47s)

[edit] Clffhangers

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
  1. Death from the Sky: Zorro, Joyce and Philip, aboard a train, are bombed from the air by El Lobo.
  2. The Fatal Minute: Knocked unconcious in a warehouse, Zorro is caught in the detonation of a hidden bomb.
  3. Juggernaut: Zorro's foot is caught in the tracks of a railroad, helpless before an oncoming Express Train.
  4. Unmasked: Under cover of his heavies' guns, El Lobo reaches to remove Zorro's mask.
  5. Sky Pirate: Zorro's plane comes under fire as it taxies for takeoff.
  6. The Fatal Shot: Fighting Trelliger, Zorro falls to the courtyard. El Lobo pulls a gun on the prone vigilante.
  7. Burning Embers: Zorro is caught in a burning building when the floor gives way beneath him.
  8. Plunge of Peril: Attempting to escape on a funicualr railway, Zorro plummets down a cliff.
  9. Tunnel of Terror: Zorro is trapped atop the carriage of a train as it enters a tunnel - which explodes.
  10. Trapped: In a rooftop chase, Zorro loses his balance and falls from the skyscraper.
  11. Right of Way: Zorro, in a truck, is set for a collision with El Lobo, in a train.
Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • This Zorro uses twin pistols as his main weapons of choice, rather than a more traditional sword or whip.
  • Despite being the same character and actor, the secret identity of the title character is extended to Zorro appearing separately to James Vega in the opening credits.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

    [edit] External links

    Preceded by
    S.O.S. Coast Guard (1937)
    Republic Serial
    Zorro Rides Again (1937)
    Succeeded by
    The Lone Ranger (1938)
    Preceded by
    none
    Zorro Serial
    Zorro Rides Again (1937)
    Succeeded by
    Zorro's Fighting Legion (1939)
    Preceded by
    none
    Witney-English Serial
    Zorro Rides Again (1937)
    Succeeded by
    Drums of Fu Manchu (1940)
    Zorro
    Notable Books
    The Curse of Capistrano | Zorro
    Notable Films
    Douglas Fairbanks: The Mark of Zorro | Don Q, Son of Zorro
    Robert Livingstone: The Bold Caballero
    John Carroll: Zorro Rides Again
    Reed Hadley: Zorro's Fighting Legion
    Tyrone Power: The Mark of Zorro
    Linda Stirling: Zorro's Black Whip
    George Turner: Son of Zorro
    Clayton Moore: Ghost of Zorro
    Guy Williams: Zorro, the Avenger | The Sign of Zorro
    Rodolfo de Anda: La Gran Aventura Del Zorro
    Frank Langella: The Mark of Zorro
    Alain Delon: Zorro
    George Hamilton: Zorro, The Gay Blade
    Anthony Hopkins / Antonio Banderas: The Mask of Zorro
    Antonio Banderas: The Legend of Zorro
    Television
    "Zorro" | "The New Adventures of Zorro" | "Zorro and Son" | "Zorro" | "The Legend of Zorro" | "The New Adventures of Zorro" | Zorro: La Espada y La Rosa |"Zorro: Generation Z"
    Notable Stage Productions
    "Zorro in Hell" [1] | "Untitled Zorro Musical" [2]
    In other languages