9/10
An Excellent, Mostly Fair Serial
20 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I love serial films, with 12 or 15 chapters of light hearted adventure all revolving around a cliffhanger ending. Forgot logic, ignore the plot holes, and just enjoy the ride.

Zorro's Black Whip is one of my favorite serials, which starred the fantastic Linda Sterling (actress in many other serials) in the title role, a masked vigilante defending the territory of Idaho against outlaws out to run it to suit themselves. With the help of undercover government agent Vic Gordon, Barbara (as the newspaper publisher) and the mysterious Black Whip (Barbara in her undercover identity) work to stop lawlessness, defend new settlers (which would vote in favor of statehood), and unmask the identity of the mastermind behind the whole outlaw operation.

The use of a woman as the secret masked hero is rare in that era, but held her own throughout the film. Sure, she mostly used a gun or her whip to disarm her opponents, but she was willing to mix it up hand to hand. Plus, she was one clever heroine to get out of the various deathtraps sprung on her.

Zorro's Black Whip is a stellar example of what a serial film should be, and has all the elements of it. Masked hero's, secret villains, recycled footage from other films, a recap episode, cliffhanger endings, and lighthearted popcorn fare in twelve exciting chapters.
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