It features King Baggot as the president of the Criminology Club and Marguerite Snow as a Secret Service agent who investigate spies.[3] Among the events depicted are the sending of the Zimmermann Telegram, Franz von Rintelen's attempts to sabotage cargo loading in San Francisco Harbor, and the capture of the German espionage plans. It was directed by George Lessey, Wellington A. Playter, Leopold Wharton, and Theodore Wharton, and produced by the Whartons Studio. The serial is now considered lost.[4] Because this serial was a commercial failure, it was the last one made by Whartons due to the studio being forced to declare bankruptcy.
Background
After Flynn's retirement from the Secret Service his work investigating sabotage during the war were interwoven with fictitious characters and events by Courtney Ryley Cooper into a 20-part spy thriller.[3] These were also published as weekly installments in The Atlanta Constitution's magazine section during 1918 under the title The Eagle's Eye: A True Story of the Imperial German Government's Spies and Intrigues in America.[5] Fifteen of the episodes were republished as chapters in a book the following year.[6]
^ ab"Serials and Series". Exhibitors Herald and Motography. Vol. VII, no. 5. Chicago. July 27, 1918. p. 41. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
^Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2014). "F". World War I: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 562. ISBN9781851099658. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
^"The Eagle's Eye". Silent Era. 17 November 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
^Flynn, William J. (April 21, 1918). "The Eagle's Eye: True Story of the Imperial German Government's Spies and Intrigues in America". The Atlanta Constitution. No. 1. p. 18.