The Green Hornet | |
Director: | Ford Beebe Ray Taylor |
Producer: | Henry MacRae |
Screenplay: | George H. Plympton (as Geo. H. Plympton) Basil Dickey Morrison Wood (as Morrison C. Wood) Lyonel Margolies |
Starring: | Gordon Jones Wade Boteler Keye Luke Anne Nagel |
Cinematography: | Jerome Ash William A. Sickner |
Editing: | Irving Birnbaum Joseph Gluck Alvin Todd |
Studio: | Universal Pictures |
Distributor: | Universal Pictures |
Runtime: | 258 minutes (13 chapters) 99 minutes (movie) |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Green Hornet is a 1940 black-and-white 13-chapter movie serial from Universal Pictures, produced by Henry MacRae, directed by Ford Beebe and Ray Taylor, starring Gordon Jones, Wade Boteler, Keye Luke, and Anne Nagel. The serial is based on The Green Hornet radio series by George W. Trendle and Fran Striker.
Britt Reid, the new publisher of The Sentinel newspaper, secretly becomes the vigilante crime fighter The Green Hornet. Backing him up is his Korean valet and inventor Kato. Together, they investigate and expose several separate underworld rackets. During the course of 13 serial chapters, these high-profile events lead the Hornet and Kato into continued conflict with the henchmen of "The Chief", the hidden mastermind behind a 12-person criminal syndicate controlling those rackets.
Source:[3]
In 1990, under the same title, GoodTimes Home Video released a feature-length version of the serial on VHS tape, re-edited from the footage in the last six chapters.
Under the title The Green Hornet: Movie Edition, VCI Entertainment released its version of the serial on DVD, January 11, 2011, which includes the first and last chapter and selected other chapters.[4]
The 1960s Batman television series was created because of the popularity of a re-release of Columbia's Batman serial. The success of both led to the production of a Green Hornet TV series, which was played as a straight action crime series, "in the tradition of its former presentations", rather than the campy Batman series. It was cancelled after only one season.[5]