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Thursday, September 5, 2024

FEDERAL OPERATOR 99

Lorna Gray and George J. Lewis
FEDERAL OPERATOR 99 (12-chapter Republic serial/1945). Directors: Spencer Gordon Bennet; Richard Cherwin; Yakima Canutt. Colorized

Two determined men are out to get one another. On on side is crime lord Jim Belmont (George J. Lewis of Radar Patrol vs. Spy King) -- with his female partner Rita Parker (Lorna Gray of Flying G-Men) -- and on the other is Jerry Blake (Marten Lamont), aka Federal Operator 99, who is out to stymie everyone of his schemes with the help of feisty "secretary" Joyce Kingston (Helen Talbot). Jim is supposedly a great lover of classical music, but the only piece he ever plays is "Moonlight Sonata." In addition to Rita, he's got Farrell (Hal Taliaferro) and other gunsels working for him, while Jerry has agent Fred Martin (William Stevens). 

Jerry (Marten Lamont) in disguise
Federal Operator 99 is practically a textbook case of how a cliffhanger serial should be handled. The actors play with enthusiasm, the stunt work and fight scenes (with virtually every stick of furniture being smashed) are excellent, there are several outstanding cliffhangers, and the exciting pace never flags. Poor Joyce is nearly cremated at one point, and has a huge propeller heading in her direction at another. Jerry is caught in a room with bars and fiery flame jets and engages in lively fisticuffs with Tom Steele (who plays several roles). There's a highly suspenseful business involving a bomb at a barn door. Joyce and Rita have a "catfight" in the cab of a speeding truck, with the former throwing the latter out on her keister. And there's a thrilling climax in an abandoned theater where our villains come to their richly-deserved fates. This version is colorized and eliminates the opening and closing credits of each chapter. Sometimes we see our heroes escaping a doom trap before we see the trap itself, but this is a minor problem.  

Verdict: Outstanding serial is great fun and even better in color. ***1/2.  

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