Table of Contents

Plot
Cast
Production
Music
Critical reception
Chapter titles
See also
References
External links

Ace Drummond (serial)

NameAce Drummond
Image
CaptionFilm poster for Chapter 8
DirectorFord Beebe
Clifford Smith
StarringJohn 'Dusty' King
Jean Rogers
Noah Beery Jr.
Lon Chaney Jr.
CinematographyRichard Fryer
DistributorUniversal Pictures
Released1936-10-19-
Runtime13 chapters (258 min)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Ace Drummond, Chapter 1: Where East Meets West
Ace Drummond, Chapter 2: The Invisible Enemy
Ace Drummond, Chapter 3: The Doorway of Doom
Ace Drummond is a Universal Pictures 1936 film serial based on the comic strip "Ace Drummond" written by Captain Eddie Rickenbacker and drawn by Clayton Knight. The serial's cast features John King, Jean Rogers, Noah Beery Jr. and Jackie Morrow, with Lon Chaney Jr. in a supporting role.

Plot

A mysterious villain who calls himself the Dragon is attempting to prevent International Airways from beginning service in Mongolia, in order to protect the secret of the mountain of jade for himself.

The serial features a dungeon in the nearby monastery, the kidnapping of an archeologist who stumbles onto the secret, his daughter's attempts to rescue him with Ace's help, a death ray the Dragon uses on the airline pilots, a radio system by which The Dragon communicates with his henchmen via the rotation of Buddhist prayer wheels (each transmission concluding "The Dragon commands!"), and a squadron of his own fighter planes.

Cast


together with:

Sam Ash as LePage; Hooper Atchley as Caldoni; Louis Vincenot as Lo Tan; Eddie Parker as Dmitri; Tom Steele and George De Normand as Other Henchman;

Russell Wade as Pilot; House Peters Jr. as Co-Pilot; Diana Gibson as Stewardess; and Ed Piel Sr. as Passenger.

Production

Ace Drummond was based on a comic strip by Captain Eddie Rickenbacker.

Ace Drummond gained good publicity following a set visit by Amelia Earhart. The famous aviator had driven out to the San Fernando Valley, after hearing that the serial was being shot there on location, where she watched the filming of the chapter two cliffhanger.

In the traditional foreword at the beginning of each chapter, Ace Drummond used comic strips to summarise the story so far. This worked well, and Universal who had been trying to get away from using written text in its forewords, used "similar gimmicks" in their succeeding serials.

Music

Ace also regularly performs his theme song, "Give Me a Ship and a Song".

Critical reception

In the words of Cline, Ace Drummond "exuded the futuristic aura of Flash Gordon combined with the eerie mystery of Baron Frankenstein's castle laboratory."

Chapter titles


Source for titles:

See also


References


External links


Category:1936 films
Category:1936 adventure films
Category:1930s spy films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American aviation films
Category:American spy films
Category:1930s English-language films
Category:Films based on American comics
Category:Films directed by Ford Beebe
Category:Universal Pictures film serials
Category:Articles containing video clips
Category:American adventure films
Category:1936 American films
Category:English-language adventure films