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Commando_Cody
Commando Cody

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Carmic



Registered: January 2008
Location: Clearwater FL
Posts: 214
users gallerySee all of this user's gallery
Commando Cody was the hero in a 12-episode science-fiction serial made in 1952 by Republic Pictures called Radar Men from the Moon, it was followed up 1953 with the 12 episode, "Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe". Notice the resemblance in name to "Sky Captain and the World of Tommorow" released in 2004.
The Rocketeer is based on a comic book series by Dave Stevens, which was in turn a nod to the various Republic Rocketman characters. You have to be really "old school" to have seen this one in theaters.
· Date: Mon November 17, 2008 · Views: 2448 · Filesize: 727.3kb · Dimensions: 1680 x 1050 ·
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Tim
*


Registered: May 2006
Posts: 12,699
Mon November 17, 2008 3:38pm Rating: 10.00 

Awesome, he reminds me of the Rocketeer. Those old serials are for sale http://superherouniverse.com/store/DVD/Keywords-search-Commando+Cody--1.html
Carmic

Registered: January 2008
Location: Clearwater FL
Posts: 214
Mon November 17, 2008 6:41pm

Thanks Tim!
Tim
*


Registered: May 2006
Posts: 12,699
Tue November 18, 2008 6:49am

Found this out last night while working on a Captain Marvel page.
The flying technique used in the Captain Marvel serial had been developed in the earlier serial Darkest Africa (1936) and was later used again in the "Rocket Man" serials (King of the Rocket Men, Radar Men from the Moon, Zombies of the Stratosphere and Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe) released during 1949-1953. http://superherouniverse.com/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Captain_Marvel
Tim
*


Registered: May 2006
Posts: 12,699
Tue November 18, 2008 6:51am

Some more info on Commando Cody


Commando Cody was the hero in a 12-episode science-fiction serial made in 1952 by Republic Pictures entitled Radar Men from the Moon, which was followed up 1953 with the 12 episode Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe. Another 1953 Republic serial, Zombies of the Stratosphere, was originally written as a sequel to Radar Men from the Moon but, for unexplained reasons, the lead character's name was changed from Commando Cody to Larry Martin at the start of shooting, which occurred after the first three episodes of "Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe" were completed, thus interrupting production of Commando Cody. Further complicating the picture is that "Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe" was originally planned for television, with each episode running 25 minutes, but was subsequently put out theatrically two years before being sold to television. Because of its origins, the length of the episodes, and the lack of the cliffhanger style of episode endings, many entrenched serial fans refuse to acknowledge it as a serial, although it clearly has a single story line and the plot progresses from chapter to chapter with no capacity to run any of them individually or in any but one order (the episodes carried chapter numbers and titles on the theatrical prints).


Commando Cody serials are sometimes confused with King of the Rocket Men (1949), because the rocket-powered flying suit worn by the title character also became a wardrobe piece worn by Cody. To add to the confusion, Larry Martin wore the same suit again in Zombies of the Stratosphere. Referring to these different Republic Pictures characters wearing this prop suit collectively as "The Rocketman" is a concept formalized on film by Walt Disney Productions in their 1991 film, The Rocketeer.


The Rocketeer is based on a comic book series by Dave Stevens, which was in turn a nod to the various Republic Rocketman characters. However, some have noted that the original Cody rocket suit design appears to have been "lifted" by Republic from a preliminary flying suit design for the 1940s Fawcett comic book character called Bulletman, whose adventures the studio had once considered adapting into a serial. The strange character name "Commando Cody" was possibly an attempt to make children think they were going to see the adventures of Commander Corry, the hero of the ABC TV and radio series Space Patrol (1950–1955). The equally strange title "Sky Marshal of the Universe," was probably the studio's imitation of Corry's title, "Commander-in-Chief of the Space Patrol," proclaimed at the beginning of every Space Patrol radio and TV broadcast. However, there is no concrete evidence that this was a consideration of anyone at Republic Pictures.

 
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