Panther Girl of the Kongo | |
Director: | Franklin Adreon |
Producer: | Franklin Adreon |
Cinematography: | Bud Thackery |
Distributor: | Republic Pictures |
Runtime: | 12 chapters (167 minutes (serial) 100 minutes (TV) |
Language: | English |
Country: | United States |
Budget: | $172,793 (negative cost: $179,341) |
Panther Girl of the Kongo is a 1955 Republic movie serial that contains a great deal of stock footage from the 1941 Republic serial Jungle Girl. This was the penultimate of Republic's 66 serial films.
Mad scientist Dr. Morgan wants sole access to secret diamond mines in the local area of Africa. He breeds giant crayfish ("Claw Monsters") to scare away any other inhabitants. Jean Evans, the Panther Girl and friend Larry Sanders encounter the plot while on a photo safari in the region.[1]
Panther Girl of the Kongo was budgeted at $172,793, although the final negative cost was $179,341 (a $6,548, or 3.8%, overspend). It was the most expensive Republic serial of 1955.
It was filmed between August 16 and September 4 of 1954 under the working title Panther Woman of the Kongo. The serial's production number was 1939.
In order to use significant stock footage from the earlier Jungle Girl and cheaply pad Panther Girl of the Kongo, a duplicate costume was used. As a result, Republic's last female lead wore the same costume as its first.[2] [3]
The film's special effects were created by the Lydecker brothers. They used real crayfish as the monsters, and employed scaled-down props to create the illusion of gigantic size.[4]
Panther Girl of the Kongos official release date was January 3, 1955, although this was actually the date when the sixth chapter was made available to film exchanges. This was followed by a rerelease of Jesse James Rides Again instead of a new serial. The last new serial, King of the Carnival, followed in the summer.
The film was one of 26 Republic serials packaged for television broadcast as part of Republic's Century 66 in 1966. The title of the film was changed to The Claw Monsters, and it was trimmed 100 minutes in length.