Camp or genuinely in earnest and the place of racism in World War Two entertainment: Batman, 1943 serial edited into a feature film




In 1966, Adam West and Burt Ward set the standard for camp with the Batman TV show that ran for three seasons. A little over twenty years before, Lewis Wilson and Douglas Croft donned the capes and fought a Japanese master spy and his ring of domestic terrorists.

The WWII Columbia serial is earnest and despite its racism, witty and no less of a hoot than it’s later, mid-twentieth century broadcast successor. That said, it’s not camp because the stakes are higher and the driving force behind the plot is more of the moment than the goofy, winking tales of the televised version.

It's difficult to assess the general run of pop genre works like serials and other B-movies without considering who they were made for and who made them. The times dictated different approaches. There was "high art" like opera, theater, and the fine plastic arts of painting and sculpture by "the masters" and there were the "low arts" like the movies (particularly like the one under discussion) and comic books.

 
Okay. He's not Christian Bale
In the current example, we have a work from a major studio that also produced two-reelers, Three Stooges shorts and its share of second-tier product. Typically, Columbia’s serials were not as polished or financed as much as Republic Studios whose serials, at there best, were thrilling and brought a cleverness if not intelligence to what is essentially adults playing dress-up with scripts that were often barely more than making it up as they went along. I’m not talking about studied or disciplined improvisation; often, the actions that drove the plots to these things were little more than “well, let’s see what happens if they do this”, and scene.

However, “Batman” was a surprise. After Republic’s success with “Captain Marvel” (a truly brilliant example of the genre), Columbia went into production with DC Comics’ Batman, their other popular leader (and budgetary considerations dictated that their big guy Supes wouldn’t show up on screen until the post-war years). If “Batman” isn’t quite in the same league with “Captain Marvel”, it’s close in terms of direction and performances.

Seven years prior, Lambert Hillyer directed one of the most atmospheric horror movies ever with “Dracula’s Daughter” (which deserves its own entry) and one of the most peculiar with “The Invisible Ray” (including a great pairing of Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi). The man has style to burn, but he also knew how to let actors bring a bit more to the proceedings than these types of film require. Consequently, Wilson and Croft are a bit better rounded than their contemporaries and Shirley Page and J. Carrol Naish as love interest/damsel in occasional distress and evil villain Dr. Daka respectively, bring the zing, too.

Another aspect of looking at genre films from earlier eras is the racism endemic to genre films that is only heightened by the events of the time. If it’s understandable that the Japanese were stigmatized in popular culture under the guise of patriotism, there’s still a chilling effect cast immediately by the opening narration that informs that a wise government has removed the “shifty-eyed Japs” from Gotham’s Tokyo Town. The spectre of internment camps looms large and the displacement of first and second generation Japanese American citizens is depressing.

That said, I’d suggest that’s one of the reasons why these productions require study. In other times, racism and marginalization of people of color and women are so casual that, even though I’ve studied American films from all eras and am well aware of the jingoism, racism and misogyny, my jaw still drops and goes slack.

This “featurization” of a fifteen chapter serial into almost four hours is instructive of what young people enjoyed in the movie houses of the period. You cold spend the entire day with a  chapter of a serial, a couple of cartoons, a short or two, a newsreel and a couple of short features or perhaps, one long one.

The various entertainment components would feature overwhelmingly white casts except where, say, someone like Mantan Moreland or Stepinfetchit would be used for “comic” relief and a European might take on the persona of an Asian or Latin American hero or heroin (with the exception of a Keye Luke or Leo Carillo now and again). Otherwise, Latinx people were caricatures of the lazy, or stupid stereotypes and Asians were seen as cunning and scheming.

Drilling down into the current piece, there’s less racism to deal with owing to the editing down of a ten hour plus epic into a manageable piece that can be picked up and put down. You just wait for a big action sequence and cut there. That’s often where the cliff-hanger would be.

In fact, this serial was rereleased in 1965 as “An Evening with Batman and Robin”; it was popular enough that it’s reception led to the development of the TV series. The serial was then compressed and edited into this lengthy feature in the 80s with many of the racial slurs removed.

How many racial references were there? I don’t really recall. I saw the entire serial at a comic convention almost fifty years ago and as I recall, there were plenty. There still are. The response that we were at war doesn’t mean that we passively accept the racial epithets and stereotypes, but it does give us an idea of how and why racism still persists in the country today. It’s always been part of the fabric of the culture; a very large part.

As it stands, the propaganda machine ensured that there were no positive images of Japanese Americans during World War Two, even though there certainly were patriotic Japanese Americans serving in the armed forces. That’s the tragedy; no studio or any media outlet, for that matter, deigned to put forth that idea that there were loyal Nisei serving their country. Much less so, of course, no one was reporting on the camps unless it was to promote the idea that it was better for their safety (the real subtext being that Japanese people and their descendants are plotting and scheming to overthrow the U.S.)

I’ll list a few websites following this entry that the interested reader can research.

To return to the serial, what else is there aside from racism and propaganda? A pretty decent B movie. As I alluded to, the principles all seem to be in on the joke and Lewis Wilson’s Bruce Wayne is more like Tyrone Power’s Diego or Douglas Fairbank’s Don Diego Vega in their respective Zorros where the civilian alter ego is a vapid, anemic hiding their true identity.

There are interesting character touches, too, as when Croft’s Dick Grayson mentions to Wilson’s Wayne that Bruce may want to ease up on the façade lest he drive Linda Page away. It’s an interesting and well done exchange and of course, you know that subplot will resolve as, indeed, everything else in the film will.

The action sequences vary from hokey to well-executed. There’s a ray-gun that’s capable of reducing brick to powder which is pulled off pretty well. Other sequences like Batman rescuing an unconscious Linda on telephone wires above and alleyway are – well, unintentionally funny; electricity doesn’t work the way the hood is attempting to use it, but since this is a serial, the laws of physics don’t apply. No matter, somehow, the Batman (he was “The Batman” for the first few years of the forties) shimmies down his rope with Linda unharmed (and oh, boy, is she plainly a mannequin!)

The fight sequences are good, though our caped crusader is a rather large fellow in the stomach area. Not fat, necessarily, but not Christian Bale, either.

Coulda been the Joker! (and Bats has had one too many)
Interestingly, Naish’s Daka was originally supposed to be the Joker and you can see vestiges in his make-up (particularly the little string tie) and perhaps in his performance where he sounds like he’s trying to imitate Peter Lorre’s Mr. Moto.

A number of critics haven’t found “Batman” as satisfying as I; I agree that it’s clunky, and that Lewis Wilson isn’t exactly a specimen of heroic fitness, but I find this part of the charm of the piece. It is better acted than many of its peers at Columbia and it was well-received enough at the time to warrant an execrable sequel in 1949’s “Batman and Robin” (I’ve never been able to make it through it) with a different cast.

I was also tickled by Charles Middleton showing up midway through. Middleton was a great character actor who had done a little bit of everything, from “Duck Soup” as the prosecutor in the trial sequence to Ming the Merciless in the Flash Gordon serials.

The serial is not without influence, as well. It’s characterization of Alfred, Bruce’s butler, as a thin, moustachioed gent altered the character’s portrayal in the comics and for much of the ensuing decades (Michael Caine and Jeremy Irons are more robust takes on the character and Alan Napier’s was an incredibly dapper interpretation).

In looking at pop cultural artifacts from our earlier periods, it’s unrealistic to hold them accountable to our standards of civility or greater understanding of the errors of our colonialism and racist narratives pushed by a predominantly white ruling class. But it is not without use as showing just how ingrained these elements are in the nation’s DNA.

No doubt, we’ll encounter this in other entries, but it’s important to acknowledge the presence of our foibles in the historical context and the bearing they still have on current discourse and for that matter, behaviour.

Additional reading on Japanese Internment and racism during World War Two:





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