The Vigilantes Are Coming is a 1936 AmericanRepublicfilm serial directed by Ray Taylor and Mack V. Wright. It was the third of the sixty six serials made by Republic Pictures. This serial was filmed between 28 May and 17 June 1936 under the working title of The Vigilantes. It was released two months later, on 22 August 1936, under the final title. In the early 1950s the serial was re-edited into six 26½ minute episodes for television.
Plot
Following the discovery of gold in Mexican California in 1844, Russian Cossacks led by Count Ivan Raspinoff, in collusion with General Jason Burr, attempt to invade California and turn it into a RussianColony with Burr as its dictator. In doing so they round upslaves to work the mines and General Burr has Don Loring's brother and father murdered to acquire their ore-rich land. When Don returns, having been away at the time with Salvation, Whipsaw and CaptainJohn Fremont, he assumes the masked identity of The Eagle to stop them and get his revenge. He is aided by a group of vigilantes assembled from the Californian ranchers, fighting both General Burr's henchmen and Raspinoff's Cossacks, while awaiting the arrival of Captain Fremont's American troops before the colony becomes official.
Cast
Robert Livingston as Don Loring, the mild mannered church organist and the masked vigilanteThe Eagle
Kay Hughes as Doris Colton, John Colton's daughter
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams as "Salvation", leader of the vigilantes
Raymond Hatton as "Whipsaw", another Californian vigilante
Fred Kohler as General Jason Burr, conspirator with Count Raspinoff aiming to become supreme dictator of Russian California
Robert Warwick as Count Ivan Raspinoff, emissary of the Russian Tsar aiming to conquer Mexican California and claim its gold
Stedman states that The Vigilantes Are Coming "was a reworking of The Eagle, Rudolph Valentino's silent film." Harmon and Glut expand on that to say it was based on Zorro and The Lone Ranger Rides Again in addition to Valentino's The Eagle. However, no mention is made of this being a derivative work in William Witney's autobiography. The fact that it looks like Zorro, which led several countries to name the movie after Zorro: the film was named Zorro l'indomptable in France, Zorro – Der blutrote Adler in Germany, Zorro – den blodrøde ørn in Denmark and Zorro – veripunainen kotka in Finland. The main character is played by Robert Livingston, who would then play the actual Zorro in the movie The Bold Caballero, also released in 1936. The serial was budgeted at $82,616 although the final negative cost was $87,655. Despite being overbudget, this was the cheapest Republic serial of 1936 as well as the second cheapest of them all. It was filmed between 28 May and 17 June 1936 under the working title The Vigilantes. The serial's production number was 418. This was William Witney's first time working on a serial, although not as director. In The Vigilantes Are Coming he worked as a second unit director and as an extra. It was the only serial Republic produced in this year, 1936, where the lead character did not share the name of the lead actor.
The Vigilantes Are Coming's official release date is 22 August 1936, although this is actually the date the sixth chapter was made available to film exchanges.
Television
In the early 1950s, The Vigilantes Are Coming was one of fourteen Republic serials edited into a television series. It was broadcast in six 26½-minute episodes.
Chapter titles
The Eagle Strikes '
Birth of the Vigilantes '
Condemned by Cossacks '
Unholy Gold '
Treachery Unmasked '
A Tyrant's Trickery '
Wings of Doom '
A Treaty with Treason '
Arrow's Flight '
Prison of Flame '
A Race With Death '
Fremont Takes Charge '
Source:
Cliffhangers
The Eagle is shot and falls from a church bell tower.
The Eagle is locked inside the Powder Magazine when it explodes.
The Eagle is caught by a firing squad meant for Salvation.
The Eagle is caught under a hydraulic ore crusher.
The Eagle falls over a cliff under a hail of bullets.
The Eagle is knocked unconscious on a cart carrying powder when it explodes.
The Eagle trips and falls beneath the blades of four Cossacks.
A stagecoach carrying The Eagle and Count Raspinoff goes over a cliff.
The Eagle is shot off his horse and falls under the hooves of his pursuers.