Film historian and preservationist Travis Liberty stumbled 
                      across what may be the only existing copy of the movie serial 
                      in a Mosfilm warehouse, the first time anyone had seen it 
                      in almost fifty-five years. He took his find to Mike Richardson 
                      at Dark Horse Productions, and the rest is history.
                    
 At 
                      least, Liberty hopes it will be. Last Friday night at WonderCon, 
                      he held a press conference at Things From Another World, 
                      Dark Horse's San Francisco comics and collectibles shop, 
                      to announce that finally, Monarch of the Moon is 
                      ready to be seen, making its premiere at the New 
                      York Comic-Con next week. 
                    
 Barely able to contain his excitement, Liberty sat next 
                      to a controlled Chris Tongue, Creative Executive for Dark 
                      Horse Productions and the newly formed Dark Horse Indie, 
                      who made sure the eager film fan didn't reveal too much. 
                      Despite a fabled history, Monarch of the Moon remains 
                      a mystery, one that Liberty walked the press through.
                    
 The loss of the film's reels for so many years also involved 
                      the burial of a dark secret. According to Liberty in the 
                      press notes, "This project was plagued with disaster from 
                      day one. This is what happens when the government tries 
                      to mix politics with private industry"
                    
 With an almost manic glee, the historian gave reporters 
                      a rundown of the serial's plot. An alien warlord from the 
                      moon had actually provoked World War II, arming the Axis 
                      forces with advanced weaponry. Only a plucky American superhero, 
                      the Yellowjacket, could stand against the fiendish lunar 
                      plot. In the process, of course, the Army hoped Yellowjacket 
                      would inspire unprecedented military enlistment. But the 
                      film never got a chance to shine.
                    
                      
                         
                          |  | 
                         
                          | Travis 
                              Liberty, humbly assuming a place in film history... | 
                      
                    
 Nor is it acknowledged by the U.S. government. Though 
                      the Army created a shell production company called American 
                      Liberty Pictures, the sordid fate of Monarch of the Moon 
                      spurred the erasure of everything about it from government 
                      archives. Not even the tax records remain.
                     Was it the possibly record seventy-two extras dying on 
                      set? Liberty attributes that to "…lack of care in visual 
                      effects."
                    
 In doing some research, Dark Horse president Richardson 
                      discovered that twenty extras died from third-degree burns 
                      from handling props. And therein lies the secret of the 
                      demise of both the film and its director.
                    
 After Army reconnaissance in Innsbruck, Germany, uncovered 
                      Nazi weapons that looked suspiciously like those designed 
                      for Monarch of the Moon, a bizarre plot was uncovered 
                      that could only happen in the movies. Except it happened 
                      to a movie.
                    
 The propmasters turned out to be undercover German engineers 
                      funneling their unheard of million dollar budget into weapons 
                      for their cause. Though probably ignorant of the plot, Galloway 
                      was executed for treason, so far the only film director 
                      in history to suffer this fate.
                    
                      
                         
                          |  | 
                         
                          | Taken 
                              from the trailer... | 
                      
                    
 Though the U.S. Government ordered it destroyed, Monarch 
                      of the Moon must have been duplicated by the undercover 
                      agents and sent back to Berlin. When that city fell, Russian 
                      soldiers transported it to Moscow.
                     According to Liberty, a black-and-white trailer surfaced 
                      some time in the seventies, confirming the existence of 
                      a film that had faded into legend. One reporter at the press 
                      conference also reminded Liberty and the tight-lipped Tongue 
                      that a few props and the jacket worn by the lead character, 
                      the Yellowjacket, had been auctioned off at Sotheby's a 
                      few years ago.
                    
 Indeed, Dark Horse had a few props, likely gutted, in 
                      their booth at WonderCon.
                    
 As for the film itself, Liberty and a team of preservationists 
                      were given a blank check from Richardson to restore it to 
                      its unseen glory. They've spent the past eighteen months 
                      doing painstaking work; despite a black-and-white trailer, 
                      the film itself was shot in Technicolor. Improperly stored 
                      at Mosfilm, the original stock is in delicate condition.