Devil Bat's Daughter might be as forgotten as it's misunderstood. The entry is a 1946 sequel (of sorts) to the 1940, B-flick favorite, The Devil Bat, but it doesn't cling much to the original plot, beyond dishing a few establishing references. With this said, the connection has now been lovingly strengthened with inserts from the initial chapter.
This brash alteration/combination comes courtesy of Mr. Lobo and Cinema Insomnia, in what's been coined "The Least Ambitious Episode Ever," but for the sake of ensuring mass appeal, it's being promoted as Father of the Devil Bat's Daughter. The results, which include spiffy, new title cards fashioned by Mr. Lobo, can be viewed this Saturday (April 26, 10pm) on Twitch, OSI74/Roku and Amazon Fire.
For the sake of some further, movie background, The Devil Bat is probably PRC's most popular offering, directed by Jean (The Creeper/The Brute Man) Yarborough and written by John Thomas Neville and George Bricker. Bela Lugosi portrays Dr. Paul Carruthers, a scientist who nurtures oversized bats to attack those who swindled him in a business deal. As the murders mount, Dave (Captain Midnight/Reefer Madness) O'Brien's hotshot reporter, Johnny Layton, and his comedic, sidekick photographer, Donald Kerr's "One Shot" McGuire, investigate.
Devil Bat's Daughter is directed by Frank (Strangler of the Swamp) Wisbar, written by Griffin Jay and stars veteran, B-movie/movie-serial actress Rosemary La Planche, a lady whom many (myself included) find quite fetching, which isn't so surprising since La Planche holds the prestigious distinction of having been crowned Miss California from 1939 - 1941; she also won Miss America in 1941.
Devil Bat's Daughter depicts Carruthers' offspring, Nina, enduring unending guilt over her dad's ghastly actions, believing she turns into a killer after she "blanks out." On the other hand, her hypnotist-shrink may be toying with her for selfish reasons. To reveal more than this would spoil the catch, but it's suffice to say that Devil Bat's Daughter would make a dandy double feature with the psychologically bound She-Wolf of London. Devil Bat's Daughter also holds a regression slant similar to The She-Creature, I Was a Teenage Werewolf and Blood of Dracula, which fans of that 1950s trio will appreciate.

For the episode's "least ambitious," bare-bones in-betweens, Mr. Lobo stands in humble command (assisted by producer Paul Sanders), with a slew of references lifted from his 25-year career (that even goes back to his significant, Sacramento/KXT days), shot within the swift span of a week. The Devil Bat double whammy is also spiced up by visiting characters, including the voice of adult-star Amber Lily (who portrays Mr. Lobo's "mistress" rival; guess who!), all to warm the heart and tickle the frightful funny bone.
Be sure to tune in this Saturday night. Father of the Devil Bat's Daughter promises to deliver a hybrid of elevated, misunderstood entertainment.
