Showing posts with label George Pal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Pal. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics Special: The DOC SAVAGE Movie that NEVER WAS!

Since we've just re-presented the comic adaptation of the novel...
...that the 1975 movie, which featured a mysterious disease as a central plot point, was based on...

...we thought it appropriate to show you what happened to the earlier movie, based on the second Bantam Doc Savage novel, "Thousand-Headed Man" that was planned, but never reached production!
Comic cover cropped from the paperback art by James Bama
In 1966, with both Bond and Bat-manias at their peak, producers Mark Goodson & Bill Toddman intended to begin a film franchise based on the hot-selling Doc Savage pulp novels being reprinted by Bantam, starting with "The Thousand-Headed Man".
1966 Newsweek article about Doc Savage and the movie. Click to enlarge.
They contracted Chuck Connors, who had recently finished a successful run on the RifleMan tv series to play Doc, and began pre-production.
Then, things stopped dead in their tracks.
It seemed that Conde Nast, who now owned the Street and Smith pulp library, including Doc Savage, The Shadow, and The Avenger, didn't own the ancillary media rights to Doc!
Those rights had been retained by co-creator Lester Dent, who had written most of the novels (including "Thousand-Headed Man") under the "Kenneth Robeson" house name.
(Dent, had previously licensed a short-lived radio version of the character, but had been unable to develop a movie or tv version.
When he passed away, his widow retained the multi-media rights.)
Mrs. Dent was more than willing to negotiate, but time was not on the producers' side.
They had already scheduled the production, and had to start shooting something or lose their investment and the cast, most of whom had commitments scheduled after the Thousand-Headed Man shoot!
To recoup, the producers switched to an already-existing Western script called Night of the Tiger, and shot it as Ride Beyond Vengeance.
(Westerns at that point were still an "easy sell" to theatres and tv.)
Looking at the Ride Beyond Vengeance cast, it's fairly easy to guess who would've played whom...
Claude Akins as Monk
William Bryant as Renny
Jamie Farr as Johnny
Bill Bixby as Long Tom
Gary Merrill or Paul Fix as Calvin Copeland
Kathryn Hays as Lucille Copeland
Not sure who would've played Sen Gat
The cast also included Frank Gorshin and James MacArthur.
In the early 1970s, the character's rights were sold to legendary movie producer George Pal, who produced Doc Savage: the Man of Bronze, starring Ron Ely, in 1974.
The Thousand-Headed Man was eventually dramatized...as a radio mini-series for NPR, who had scored great ratings with radio versions of the original Star Wars Trilogy.
Bronze Bonuses
Here's the original pulp cover...
 ...the rarely-seen British paperback, published at the same time as the 1975 Ron Ely feature film, and, oddly enough, based on the James Bama art for #14, The Fantastic Island...
...and the official cd release of the radio show adaptation!
...adapting the unused radio show serial scripts by Lester Dent!
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Doc Savage
The Man of Bronze

Monday, June 18, 2012

Captain's Library: DESTINATION MOON

No, you're not confused.

It turns out that Space: 1999's pilot episode "Breakaway" was not the only movie or TV show to have multiple versions in other media (though it still holds the record AFAIK!)...
The George Pal movie Destination Moon has no less than three different versions published in comics!
Here's the second one, from Strange Adventures #1 (1951)!
Adaptation script by Gardner Fox, art by Curt Swan & John Fischetti

The final version, published in Youthful Publications' Captain Science #1 (November 1950) is a short text (with pix) adaptation!
It sounds like this this piece was taken directly out of the presskit.

The full-length Fawcett Comics version (which we ran HERE) also came out in 1950, when the movie was released.
DC Comics' Strange Adventures #1 is cover-dated August/September 1951 and was probably done as the film was being re-released to second-run theatres (A common practice in the pre-VCR/DVD/Internet era).

Friday, November 4, 2011

Captain's Library & Theatre: DESTINATION MOON Conclusion

Four people.
One spaceship.
A race to the Moon to beat the Communists.
(Now you know where Stan Lee and Jack Kirby got the basic premise for The Fantastic Four!)
Surviving a perilous journey, the world's first astronauts reach the Moon and are about to land...
Trivia: John Archer (wealthy industrialist Jim Barnes) played wealthy playboy Lamont Cranston for a season (1944-45) on The Shadow radio show!
Dick Wesson (Joe Sweeney) made his film debut in Destination Moon. He acted in numerous war and western flicks, usually playing a "fish-out-of-water" comedy relief character. Dick became a writer-director-producer with numerous credits including Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction, and Maude!

Here's a couple of nifty treats for you...
First, the trailer for the flick...

..then the movie itself...

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Captain's Library; DESTINATION MOON Part 2

The second (1958) reprint of this tale. Art by Charles Nicholas & Vince Alascia.
"We must beat the Commies to the Moon!"
That's the mandate wealthy industrialist Jim Barnes is given by the US government to build a prototype spacecraft designed by Professor Cargraves.
But, when they're told to postpone the test flight, Barnes, Cargraves, military liason General Thayer, and engineer Joe Sweeney launch the ship...
Lunar landing!
Crisis!
Conclusion!
(but no bug-eyed aliens)