Showing posts with label Dale Van Sickel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dale Van Sickel. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Virginia Belmont (Monogram westerns & Dangers of the Canadian Mounted)
Nee Virginia Schupp and originally from Boston (born 1921), San Diego-raised Virginia Belmont was a cigarette girl at famed Hollywood nitery The Mocambo before signing a starlet contract with RKO. She did little actual acting for that studio but decorated their patented crime series and performed the usual legwork. The 1948 Republic serial Dangers of the Canadian Mounted was a breakthrough of sorts (she had earlier, very briefly, graced the 1944 Columbia chapterplay Black Arrow) but she was going nowhere fast – and "nowhere" included co-starring in no less than three Monogram Jimmy Wakely oaters: Oklahoma Bullets , The Rangers Ride, and Courtin' Trouble (all 1948), and one each opposite Johnny Mack Brown and post-Harry Sherman William Boyd – when deciding to relocate to Italy with a new husband in tow. Adding the necessary vowel to her name and becoming Virginia Belmonte, she went on to appear in several Italian films until at least 1957.
Dangers of the Canadian Mounted (Republic, 1948)
In the Canadian Journal of Communication (volume 23. no. 4. 1998), University of Alberta professor Christopher Giddings writes: "The manifest destiny or cultural imperialism of [serials] such as Dangers of the Canadian Mounted and The Royal Mounted Rides Again [see earlier post]is apparent in the hybridized American/Canadian territories in which the films are set, Alcana and Canaska respectively." Warming up to his subject, the good professor continues:
“This annexing reinvention of the Canadian landscape, whether intentional or just the product of sloppy thinking, has political implications. A redrawing of the map harmonizes Canada with the U.S. Yet there is in this cinematic transformation an odd paradox. These U.S. producers and directors obviously thought of Canada as "other"; they recognize a Canadian difference to America by making a conscious choice to set their plots in a foreign location, a location of otherness which they then proceed to fill with American landscapes and the people and values of America's dominant white culture …”
Leave it to an academic to politicize action serials! But no one at Republic or Universal obviously thought of Canada as “other” but simply chose the location to frame stories around the colorful Canadian Mounties, always a popular subject for pulp fiction. And what could be more topical in 1947 than the building of the Alaska-Canadian Highway, a project that soon led to Alaska becoming the 49th state of the union? If anything, in Dangers it is American gangsters who are "other" and not Jim Bannon's heroic Canadian Mountie. It really is amazing what you can achieve with an expensive education if only you apply yourself! Yes, Dangers does reflect "the people and values of America's dominant white culture" – as though that in itself is somewhat suspect and as opposed to exactly what? – but America’s “dominant white culture” really doesn't do all that well considering Anthony Warde’s ultimate lack of success.
Academic theory aside, Dangers remains one of Republic's better post-war serials with some very interesting ideas in the original script. Including the character of Skagway Kate, an American mind you, although exactly how interesting we shall never know due to a bit of censorship trouble (see below). Another unusual touch that did make it through to the finished serial is the very physical use of the border between the territory of Alaska and Canada. With no jurisdiction on the Alaskan side, forceful Sgt. Royal picks a fight with Warde’s Mort Fowler at Skagway Kate's, beating the blackguard straight across the border and right into his own bailiwick. (Chapter 8.) While we get the usual amount of stock footage, including cliffhangers, it is well incorporated and Jim Bannon heads a game cast that includes such veteran stuntmen as Eddie Parker and Bud Wolfe. Nothing to get too excited about, Dangers of the Canadian Mounted is pure escapist entertainment, 1948 Republic style. Nothing more, nothing less.
Censorship troubles
The character of Skagway Kate was conceived by the writers as running a gambling hall complete with dancing girls but the censors objected to what could be misinterpreted as a brothel and Kate became a rather more sedate operator of a boarding house. Veteran comedienne Dorothy Granger (1914-1995), who plays Skagway Kate with a Mae Westian swagger, also lost he opportunity to sing in a late rewrite. Today, Granger is best remembered for having worked with such Hal Roach comedians as Laurel & Hardy and Charley Chase, not to mention co-starring in 2-reelers with Harry Langdon, The Three Stooges, W.C. Fields, and Edgar Kennedy. She eventually retired from the screen to run a Hollywood upholstery store with her husband.
All in the family:
In the opening chapter of Dangers of the Canadian Mounted little Dan Page surreptitiously listens to henchmen Dale and Scott plan their next move. The boy is played by young Bill Van Sickel, the son of stuntman Dale Van Sickel who, in this scene, portrays the villainous Scott. In chapter 4, the elder Van Sickel, now playing a henchman named Steele, actually knocks junior over in his attempt to flee the Mounties.
Uncredited appearance department I
In another example of cost-cutting, ubiquitous B-movie actor Marshall Reed (1917-1980) plays no less than four different Mounties: Dave (chapter 3), Douglas (5), Jim (7) and Williams (8). As handsome as the leading men he supported Reed later assumed the starring role in the 1954 Columbia serial, Riding with Buffalo Bill, but it was too little too late for an attempt at genre stardom. Off-screen, Reed ran into some trouble that no serial hero would encounter, including a December 1956 arrest for drunk driving. The actor was stopped on Pico Blvd. and Missouri St. in West Los Angeles but then refused to take a sobriety test. At the time of his arrest, Reed was appearing on the television crime show The Lineup.
Uncredited appearance department II
The voices of Don "Red" Barry and Roy Barcroft are heard in telephone conversations, in chapters 4 and 11 respectively. All in a day's work when under contract to a studio like Republic.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
King of the Forest Rangers (Republic, 1946)
You certainly didn't need to be well versed in Shakespeare, Ibsen or Strindberg to star in an action serial. In fact, several rank amateurs did quite well as chapter play heroes, including gridiron and other sport stars, big game hunters, and aviators. Larry Thompson (see illustration at right), the hero in King of the Forest Rangers, is clearly not an experienced actor and almost certainly chosen solely for his resemblance to ace stuntman Dale Van Sickel. This is just fine. We don't demand much more from a serial protagonist that he, or she, can speak their lines with a modicum of conviction and refrain from bumping into the furniture when not specifically engaged in a brawl. But when it comes to the Boss Villain, we may reasonably demand more than what we get here.
Stuart Hamblen is just as amateurish as Thompson, if not even more so, and that is a big problem in a genre that usually employed the likes of Charles Middleton, Eduardo Ciannelli, Henry Brandon, Roy Barcroft and other natural scene-stealers to perform the dastardly deeds. Known as a country & western singer and songwriter (and a 1952 third party presidential candidate on a prohibition ticket), Hamblen is as wooden as they come and not even his chief lieutenant, the experienced Anthony Warde, can quite make up for such deficiency. Mr. Hamblen's presence as the lead villain is especially galling considering that a much more appropriate candidate, Republic veteran LeRoy Mason, is wasted in a nothing-part as a gambler.
Too bad; except for that single miscalculation in casting Forest Rangers is otherwise a perfectly adequate example of a latter-day Republic serial with generally unobtrusively inserted stock footage from earlier Northwoods melodramas and the customary fine work by the stuntmen. And it has that dreaded pulp shredder imperiling lovely Helen Talbot in chapter 9!
About the production
It had become the norm by 1946 for Republic stuntmen such as Tom Steele and Dale Van Sickel to play more than one henchman in each serial, sometimes up to four or five. King of the Forest Rangers took the practice to the extreme by also having one actor, Scott Elliott (aka Robert Neil), play no less than four different rangers. This way, the serial could live up to its title without the extra expenditure of hiring four actors to play the parts.
Helen Talbot
Blonde and voluptuous (“the most stacked of all the girls at Republic,” says Peggy Stewart), Kansas-born Helen Talbot (1924-2010) suffered quite a few indignities in her two serials, including nearly getting herself incinerated and placed before a whirling airplane propeller in Federal Operator 99 (1945). She was the girl on the pulp shredder conveyor belt in Forest Rangers and appeared in three Westerns with then-boyfriend Don “Red” Barry before packing it all in to marry someone else. Talbot, a discovery of choreographer Don Loper, began her screen life as a Goldwyn Girl and was under contract to Republic from September 10, 1943 to January 6, 1946.
Uncredited appearances department
Rex Lease, the star of such serials as Mystery Pilot (1926), The Sign of the Wolf (1931) and Custer's Last Stand (1936), plays a ranger and is awarded a couple of lines in Forest Rangers. Lease, whose stardom waned in the 1930s due to alcoholism, was a special favorite of Republic president Herbert Yates who secured him employment in all four of the studio’s 1946 serial releases.
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