From the same guy that brought you Superman Classic, comes Flash Gordon, done the same way.
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BChNOWus2-8[/yt]
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BChNOWus2-8[/yt]
Dale Arden was certainly bubbly and, er, "bouncy".
Dale Arden was certainly bubbly and, er, "bouncy".
Fanservice must be appreciated, wherever it appears.
Great art...but honestly, I do have an issue with the sexualization of women in this cartoon.
The producer is definitely hitting is goals, and overall, i'd like to see more...but it does bother me .
Where's Christopher Bennett to chime in?![]()
Would they be able to authorize him to do some shorts?
Jean Rogers played Dale in the first two serials, but she did have dark hair in the second one.(I think a different actress played Dale in the second and third stories and she had darker hair.)
The sexism is mean to evoke the 1930's version of Flash Gordon, in which women were helpless.
As I said in my comments at Cartoon Brew, although this is a nice little film, this should not be expanded into a longer feature-the 21st century needs a new Flash Gordon that will fit into it.
That fan film is a lot of fun paying homage to Flash in his many forms. From the comics to the movie (football) to the serials (Jean Rogers as Dale Arden) to even the recent TV show (Eric Johnson) and probably things I've missed.
Hard to watch that Filmation Flash and not see He-Man and Star Trek and their other properties.
You're very welcome. I love those old serials. I've got all three, plus Buck Rogers, on DVD. I have to say, though, the third FG serial is not as good as the others, and not just for the lack of Jean Rogers.Thanks, RJ! I was at the office when I composed that post and had limited web access to properly research. (Why the TrekBBS is permitted, I have no idea.)
Not to mention what they did to Zarkov, a little of which carried over to this film, unfortunately.And the last time somebody tried to update the concept for this century they turned Flash into a jobless has-been who lived with his mother. More of that kind of modernity we don't need.
No doubt about that. I daresay it was Filmation's "crowning effort". Some might debate the rotoscoping in He-Man may have been just a tad more fluid, but just about in every other way FG was the superior production. I love the irony. The project started as a two hour tele-film. NBC saw the potential of greater returns if new material was created to envelope "highlights" from the movie and turn it into a series. In doing so, the production wound up paying closer homage to the Saturday matinee serials featuring Buster Crabbe, all the while retaining the the sense of grandeur and the look of Alex Raymond's art which could not be recreated in the 1930s live action material. It was the near perfect blending of motifs.
Sincerely,
Bill
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