A villain named Marlof attempts to set up secret missile bases inside Canada so he can launch missiles at the U.S. The Canadian Mounted Police dispatch agents to try to stop him.A villain named Marlof attempts to set up secret missile bases inside Canada so he can launch missiles at the U.S. The Canadian Mounted Police dispatch agents to try to stop him.A villain named Marlof attempts to set up secret missile bases inside Canada so he can launch missiles at the U.S. The Canadian Mounted Police dispatch agents to try to stop him.
William Henry
- Sgt. Don Roberts
- (as Bill Henry)
Gordon Armitage
- Ed Olson [Chs.1-5]
- (uncredited)
Roughie the Bear
- Cub
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Toughie the Bear
- Cub
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Lovyss Bradley
- Settler
- (uncredited)
Earle D. Bunn
- Henchman
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCHAPTER TITLES: 1. Arctic Intrigue; 2. Murder or Accident; 3. Fangs of Death; 4. Underground Inferno; 5. Pursuit to Destruction; 6. The Boat Trap; 7. Flames Versus Gun; 8. Highway of Horror; 9. Doomed Cargo; 10. Human Quarry; 11. Mechanical Homicide; 12. Cavern of Revenge.
- GoofsChapter two foreword states that on orders from Marloff, Beck prepares to ambush Don and Kay who had left the Settlers to hunt for food. Actually they are looking for a safe place to cross the frozen river.
- ConnectionsEdited from Call of the Yukon (1938)
Featured review
Cold War era serial has Marlof (Arthur Space) an agent for an unnamed foreign government attempting to build missile bases in the Great White North in order to launch an attack on the United States. To thwart the bad guys, Mountie Don Roberts (William Henry) is tasked with tracking down the perpetrators and to discover the locations of the planned launch sites. With the fate of the free world hanging by a thread, the Canadian Government decides to go that extra mile and assign undercover operative Kay Conway (Susan Morrow) to assist Roberts. Given the gravity of the situation and the pending annihilation of multiple American cities it might seem like two agents is a bit understaffed but fortunately for the United States Marlof can only afford a couple of henchmen himself, Beck and Reed. (Dale Van Sickel, Mike Ragan)
Not only can Marlof only afford two guys, but Beck and Reed are probably the most inept henchmen ever. If you think this type of plan seems too big for just three guys, so do Beck and Reed as they spend each chapter more or less shrugging their shoulders and complaining to Marloff that the job is just too difficult.
This later-on entry into the Republic Cliffhanger realm is ultimately a pretty weak offering. Not much suspense as we know who the 'Mastermind' is, so no big reveal at the end. There is lots of stock footage ,studio shots against Artic backdrops and the usual continuity gaffs. Given the title of the film and the prevailing Cold War conditions of the time you would think that they might have worked something a little more meaty into the plot, but other than the concept of building a few launch pads there isn't any play up of the "Red Menace" angle and even that seems doubtful because of the aforementioned henchmen, Beck and Reed's failure to successfully accomplish even the simplest villainous tasks.
The Television era cliffhangers are a mixed bag. Economics being the primary driving force. It's clear that Republic didn't invest much in the way of time, money or much effort on this one. Unless you're a big fan of the old chapter-plays and are determined to watch every one ever made you may want just to skip on by.
This later-on entry into the Republic Cliffhanger realm is ultimately a pretty weak offering. Not much suspense as we know who the 'Mastermind' is, so no big reveal at the end. There is lots of stock footage ,studio shots against Artic backdrops and the usual continuity gaffs. Given the title of the film and the prevailing Cold War conditions of the time you would think that they might have worked something a little more meaty into the plot, but other than the concept of building a few launch pads there isn't any play up of the "Red Menace" angle and even that seems doubtful because of the aforementioned henchmen, Beck and Reed's failure to successfully accomplish even the simplest villainous tasks.
The Television era cliffhangers are a mixed bag. Economics being the primary driving force. It's clear that Republic didn't invest much in the way of time, money or much effort on this one. Unless you're a big fan of the old chapter-plays and are determined to watch every one ever made you may want just to skip on by.
- Henchman_Number1
- Jun 11, 2019
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $172,795 (estimated)
- Runtime2 hours 47 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Canadian Mounties vs. Atomic Invaders (1953) officially released in India in English?
Answer