The Airmail Mystery Explained

The Airmail Mystery
Director:Ray Taylor
Producer:Henry MacRae
Starring:James Flavin
Al Wilson
Walter Brennan
Wheeler Oakman
Music:David Broekman
Distributor:Universal Pictures
Runtime:12 chapters (225 min.)
Country:United States
Language:English

The Airmail Mystery is a 1932 Universal pre-Code movie serial directed by Ray Taylor, written by Ella O'Neill, starring James Flavin and Wheeler Oakman, and featuring Al Wilson doing the aerial stunts.[1] [2] The Airmail Mystery was Universal's first aviation serial that set the pattern for the aviation serials and feature films to follow.[3] The film also marks the film debut of James Flavin.[4] The Airmail Mystery is considered a lost film.[5]

Plot

Airmail pilot Bob Lee (James Flavin), owner of a gold mine, faces off against "The Black Hawk" (Wheeler Oakman) who has kidnapped Jimmy Ross (Al Wilson), Bob's best friend. The Black Hawk carries out a series of attacks on Bob's ore shipments by air, using an unusual catapult device that launches aircraft into the sky to intercept Bob's aircraft. With his sweetheart, Mary Ross (Lucile Browne), Bob constantly battles against his enemy, and eventually is able to defeat him.

Chapter titles

  1. Pirates of the Air
  2. Hovering Death
  3. A Leap for Life
  4. A Fatal Crash
  5. The Hawk Strikes
  6. The Bridge of Destruction
  7. The Hawk's Treachery
  8. The Aerial Third Degree
  9. The Attack on the Mine
  10. The Hawk's Lair
  11. The Law Strikes
  12. The Mail Must Go Through

Source:[6]

Cast

Production

Al Wilson (who played the hero's sidekick Jimmy Ross in the serial) worked together with stuntmen like Frank Clarke and Wally Timm and also for movie companies, including Universal Pictures. After numerous appearances in stunt roles, he started his actor career in 1923, with the serial, The Eagle's Talons.[7] He produced his own movies until 1927, when he went back to work with Universal. Wilson was also one of the pilots in Hell's Angels (1930) and during filming, he was involved in an accident where the mechanic Phil Jones died. This episode marked the end of his career as stunt pilot in movies, although he continued to work as an actor.[8]

Wilson's last role was in The Airmail Mystery. After production was complete, during the National Air Races in Cleveland in 1932, Wilson's aircraft crashed and he died a few days later in hospital due to the injuries he suffered.

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Farmer 1984, pp. 293–294.
  2. Cline, William C. (1984). "In the Nick of Time". McFarland & Company, Inc. .
  3. Cline 1984, p. 30.
  4. Harmon and Glut 1973, p. 146.
  5. Weiss and Goodgold 1973, p. 26.
  6. Cline 1984, p. 205.
  7. Wynne 1987, pp. 5–17.
  8. http://www.silentsaregolden.com/articles/aviationstuntmen.html "Stunt Pilots."