The Flying Serpent
The Flying Serpent is a 1946 American fantasy-horror film based on a story by John T Neville. It follows the deranged archaeologist, Dr Andrew Forbes, as he uses his discovery of a killer bird god, the mythical Quetzalcoatl, to murder his enemies.[1] The film is directed by Sam Newfield and features George Zucco, Ralph Lewis, Hope Kramer and Eddie Acuff.[2] It was telecast to WCBS in New York on Saturday the 5th of February 1949.[1]
The Flying Serpent | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Sam Newfield |
Produced by | Sigmund Neufeld |
Screenplay by | John T. Neville |
Story by | John T. Neville |
Starring | George Zucco Ralph Lewis Hope Kramer Eddie Acuff |
Music by | Leo Erdody |
Cinematography | Jack Greenhalgh |
Edited by | Holbrook N. Todd |
Distributed by | Producers Releasing Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 59 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The film is also known as Killer with Wings (American recut version).
Synopsis [1]
The opening sequence features an introductory text in the form of a scroll which reads:
"Near the little city of San Juan, New Mexico, stand the Aztec ruins. Archeologists tell us they are the remains of a once great temple, abandoned by the Aztecs when they migrated south to the Valley of Mexico, where they founded a rich empire. To defeat the greed of Cortez and his Spanish adventurers who had inaugurated a campaign of loot and murder, the wiley Emperor Montezuma hid his fabulous treasure far to the north and implored his native gods to guard it. Among these gods was the feathered serpent---Quetzalcoatl."
The first scene shows Dr Forbes (George Zucco) driving to the cave in which Quetzalcoatl lives. Here he taunts the serpent and, in doing so, explains that Quetzalcoatl has guarded Montezuma's treasure for 300 years. The creature has been imprisoned behind bars by Dr Forbes; it is revealed that this has been the case for 5 years. Forbes takes a feather from Quetzalcoatl and antagonises the beast, remarking that it will kill to have its feather back.
In the next scene, Forbes pretends to unintentionally give the feather to Dr. John Lambert by dropping it on the ground. Lambert, who has recently written an article entitled, "Aztec carving of the legendary bird Quetzalcoatl.", recognises the feather and acknowledging its worth, keeps it. Forbes returns to the cave and releases Quetzalcoatl which then flies in search of its feather. The beast finds Lambert, who by this point has left his office, it kills him, and returns to its cave.
It is revealed that Richard Thorpe (Ralph Lewis) will be undertaking an investigation into the death of Dr. Lambert. Upon hearing this Forbes resolves to plant a feather on Thorpe in order to have him killed. In conducting his investigation Thorpe brings up the point that Forbes' late wife died under similar circumstances to Lambert, suggesting that the two murders may be linked and that Forbes may be implicated in them. Forbes plants the feather with the hope that Thorpe will take it, however, Sheriff Bill Hayes (Henry Hall) spots it first and retrieves it. Forbes returns to the cave and releases Quetzalcoatl to kill Thorpe. However, Hayes is killed as he is in possession of the feather; Thorpe and Hastings are able to spot the beast before it flies off.
Cast
- George Zucco as Prof. Andrew Forbes
- Ralph Lewis as Richard Thorpe
- Hope Kramer as Mary Forbes
- Eddie Acuff as Jerry "Jonsey" Jones
- ? as Broadcaster Hanson
- ? as Station Manager Grant
- Wheaton Chambers as Louis Havener
- James Metcalf as Dr. John Lambert
- Henry Hall as Sheriff Bill Hayes
- Milton Kibbee as Superintendant Hastings
- Budd Buster as Dr. Wagner
- Terry Frost as Vance Bennett
Reception
The film received a rating of 4.8/10 on IMDb from a total of 342 votes[1] and a 15% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 55 votes.[3]
There was some criticism of the film due to its resemblance to the 1940 movie, "The Devil Bat". Notably, author and film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film two out of four stars, calling it "Basically a reworking of The Devil Bat."[4] Similarly, American film critic Dennis Schwartz gave the film a grade of 'C+' commenting that the film is,
"A remake of the Devil Bat that offers a slightly different theme and instead of a bat it offers a special effects flying creature (looking harmlessly like a stuffed puppet) that's half bird and half reptile... Sam Newfield shows no imagination or ability..."[5]
Remake
The film was loosely remade in 1982 by director Larry Cohen as Q, starring Michael Moriarty, Candy Clark and Richard Roundtree.
References
- The Flying Serpent (1946), retrieved 2018-09-20
- The Flying Serpent at the American Film Institute Catalog.
- The Flying Serpent, retrieved 2018-09-20
- Leonard Maltin; Spencer Green; Rob Edelman (January 2010). Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide. Plume. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-452-29577-3.
- "flyingserpent". homepages.sover.net. Retrieved 2018-09-21.
External links
- The Flying Serpent at the American Film Institute Catalog
- The Flying Serpent at IMDb
- The Flying Serpent at AllMovie
- The Flying Serpent at the TCM Movie Database
- The Flying Serpent is available for free download at the Internet Archive