Sky Racket (1937)

Sky Racket is a 1937 American action-adventure drama directed and produced by Sam Katzman, with a screenplay by Basil Dickey. Distributed by Victory Pictures, the film runs about 63 minutes and blends aviation thrills, pulp science fiction, and crime melodrama. It stars Bruce Bennett (credited as Herman Brix), Joan Barclay, and Duncan Renaldo, with supporting roles from Monte Blue and Hattie McDaniel.

Plot Summary

The story follows Eric Lane (Bruce Bennett), a government agent known as Agent 17, who is assigned to track down a gang of airmail bandits. These criminals employ a death ray device to blast planes out of the sky, threatening national security and commerce.

Meanwhile, Marion Bronson (Joan Barclay) flees an arranged marriage to Count Barksi (Duncan Renaldo) with the help of her maid Jenny (Hattie McDaniel). Marion stows away on Lane’s plane, which later crashes, leaving them vulnerable to capture by the gang. The narrative intertwines romance, espionage, and science-fiction gadgetry, culminating in Lane’s battle against the bandits and their destructive technology.

Cast

  • Bruce Bennett (Herman Brix) as Eric Lane – Agent 17
  • Joan Barclay as Marion Bronson
  • Duncan Renaldo as Count Barksi
  • Monte Blue as Benjamin Arnold
  • Hattie McDaniel as Jenny
  • Jack Mulhall as Henchman Meggs
  • Roger Williams as Henchman Nick Reagan
  • Edward Earle as FBI Chief Maddox
  • Additional supporting roles by Henry Roquemore, Lois Wilde, and others

Production Notes

  • Produced by Victory Pictures, a low-budget studio known for pulp-style adventure films.
  • Sam Katzman, later famous for serials and exploitation films, directed and produced.
  • The film combines aviation adventure with science fiction elements, a hallmark of 1930s pulp cinema.
  • Bruce Bennett, credited under his birth name Herman Brix, was a former Olympic athlete who transitioned into acting.
  • Hattie McDaniel, later an Academy Award winner for Gone with the Wind (1939), appears in a supporting comic-relief role.
  • The “death ray” plot device reflects contemporary fascination with futuristic technology and pulp science fiction tropes.

Comments

comments

Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.