Eleventh Hour (1942 animated film)
Eleventh Hour | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dan Gordon |
Story by | Carl Meyer Bill Turner |
Based on | |
Produced by | Sam Buchwald Dan Gordon Seymour Kneitel Isidore Sparber |
Starring | Bud Collyer Joan Alexander Julian Noa Jack Mercer |
Music by | Sammy Timberg |
Animation by | Willard Bowsky William Henning |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 8 minutes (one reel) |
Language | English |
Eleventh Hour is the twelfth of seventeen animated Technicolor short films based upon the DC Comics character Superman. Produced by Famous Studios, the cartoon was originally released to theaters by Paramount Pictures on November 20, 1942.[1]
Plot
[edit]While Clark Kent and Lois Lane are kept under house arrest as prisoners of war in Japan, Superman becomes a saboteur.
In the Japanese city of Yokohama, the Eleventh Hour strikes, and a ship is turned over. Superman escapes searchlights while sirens go off and goes through a window, putting a barred grille back in place. Lois asks if Clark is awake, to which he asks who could sleep through a racket like this. Lois says the racket has been happening every night since they have been interned. Clark says it may be sabotage, which Lois also hopes. She wonders if Superman is responsible. A guard tells them to stop talking.
A Japanese Official says the sabotage must stop at once. As the Eleventh Hour strikes, Clark looks at his watch and leaves the window, returning as Superman. He leaves the room by removing the grille and drags a ship over into the sea. Sabotage happens every night at the Eleventh Hour and the Official again says the sabotage still must be stopped. Lois sees Superman as he leaps between buildings. She says outside Clark's room that it is Superman, she just saw him, and the Japanese have a 'swell chance' of catching him. However, a guard covers her mouth from behind and drags her out. Notices are put up saying 'Warning! Superman One more act of Sabotage and the American Girl Reporter will be executed at once!'.
Superman sends another ship into the sea but is buried under steel girders. Lois is taken out for execution with her hands tied. As Superman digs himself out she walks against the wall and is blindfolded. Superman sees the notice and is fired on, but leaps away. He shields Lois just as the bullets are fired, and leaps away with her. On a ship landing in America, Lois is interviewed. She is asked by a reporter if Clark got away but says he is still over there while Superman promised to look after him. As the Eleventh Hour strikes in Japan there is another explosion.
Voice cast
[edit]- Bud Collyer as Clark Kent/Superman (uncredited)
- Joan Alexander as Lois Lane (uncredited)
- Jack Mercer as Japanese Guard, Japanese Official, Reporter (uncredited)
- Jackson Beck as Narrator (uncredited)
References
[edit]- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 139. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7.
External links
[edit]- 1942 films
- 1942 animated films
- 1940s American animated films
- 1940s animated short films
- 1940s animated superhero films
- Superman animated shorts
- Animated films set in Yokohama
- American World War II propaganda shorts
- Paramount Pictures short films
- American animated black-and-white films
- 1942 short films
- Japan in non-Japanese culture
- Stereotypes of East Asian people
- Film controversies
- Race-related controversies in animation
- Race-related controversies in film
- 1940s English-language films
- Films scored by Winston Sharples
- Films scored by Sammy Timberg
- English-language short films
- English-language action films
- English-language war films