Road Demon is a 1938 American crime drama film directed by Otto Brower and starring Henry Arthur, Joan Valerie, and Henry Armetta.[1] Footage from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was included along with driver accidents. It is the second release in the Sports Series of films.
Road Demon | |
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Directed by | Otto Brower |
Starring | Henry Arthur Joan Valerie Henry Armetta |
Distributed by | 20th Century-Fox |
Release date |
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Running time | 65 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
editAfter Tony Gambini and his family acquire a wrecked car, they fix it to use as a race car with Ted Rogers as the driver. Rogers competes against Skid, who was partially responsible for the death of Rogers' father at a race. During the last race, Rogers wins after Skid crashes into a wall after remembering Rogers' father.
Production
editThe film is the second release in the Sports Series produced by 20th Century-Fox. The Memorial Day Speedway Classic at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was filmed for scenes. Footage of well-known accidents that occurred at Indianapolis Motor Speedway was used in the film.[2] A model of the track and nearby buildings were built in 20th Century-Fox's lot with the supervision of millionaire racer Joe Thorne. Associate producer Jerry Hoffman obtained four of Thorne's cars that were previously used in a classic race and worth $70,000. Hoffman received the equipment to work on the motors, a racing shell, and a chassis. Garages used at the 1938 Memorial Day races were reproduced for the film.[3]
The film stars the fictional Gambini Family who first appeared in the first Sports Series film Speed to Burn.[3] Speed Demon is the first starring role of Joan Valerie. The film was released with Five of a Kind as a double feature.[4]
Reception
editBoxoffice Pro wrote that the film had "the best race sequences ever captured on film."[2] Dorothy Masters of Daily News praised the newcomer actor Henry Arthur and said that "Henry Armetta, who plays the role of Papa Gambini for a second time, provides the film with most of its fun." Masters gave the film 2 1⁄2 stars.[5] The Muncie Evening Press wrote, "Speed Demon has some exciting race sequences filmed at the Indianapolis track, showing America's fastest drivers, in action."[6]
References
edit- ^ Smith, Don G. (January 1, 2004). Lon Chaney, Jr.: Horror Film Star, 1906-1973. McFarland. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-7864-1813-8.
- ^ a b "Road Demon (1938)". AFI. Retrieved January 1, 2022.
- ^ a b "Film Produces Famous Speedway at Indianapolis". The Jackson Sun. December 4, 1938.
- ^ "Joan Valerie Has Star Role". The Rhinelander Daily News. December 14, 1938.
- ^ Masters, Dorothy (January 5, 1938). "Henry Arthur Stars In His Movie Debut". Daily News.
- ^ "Action Filmed On Indiana Track". Muncie Evening Press. December 3, 1938.