But Batman remained a going concern in the comics for decades after the TV show, while Flash Gordon--for better or for worse--was already a nostalgic relic of the past by the time the movie came along. And his glory days are still firmly rooted in days gone by.
Well, the comic strip continued to run in newspapers through 1993 as a daily and 2003 as a Sunday strip, though no doubt in far fewer papers than in its heyday. In fact, for much of the '90s, it was done by Thomas Warkentin, formerly of the syndicated
Star Trek comic strip that ran from '79 through the early '80s.
What we need is a successful new version of
Flash Gordon to provide counterbalance to the '80 movie. The 2007 series could've been that if it had started out as good as it eventually became. But unfortunately it was initially laboring under network pressure to be a
Smallville clone and keep the action mostly Earthbound, as well as being saddled with a tiny budget and poor production values. And by the time it overcame these problems and became a richer, smarter show set primarily on Mongo, most viewers had already given up on it.
I keep hoping it will find new life on home video. All but one of the bad episodes are on the first disc of the four-DVD set, so if you can get through that, the rest is fairly good. But the problem is overcoming its bad reputation -- among those who've heard of it at all.
Colossus displays the usual fear of AI and the supremacy of machines, but it's just marvellously produced and unfortunately overshadowed by movies like 2001 and Planet of the Apes. It's based on a trilogy of books, the first of which takes place in the 1960s, but the sequels appear to have advanced the calendar a century or two while retaining without explanation many of the same characters.
It’s a movie I saw once or twice on TV when I was younger, and in retrospect I think an early apocalyptic short story I wrote in study hall in high school was unconsciously influenced by it. I wouldn't say it's one of the greats, but I think it’s a significant entry in the genre of nuclear-tension movies as well as evil-computer movies, with Colossus and Guardian arguably being forerunners of Skynet from the
Terminator franchise, albeit more paternalistic and less genocidal. And I liked Joseph Sargent's directing. It had a naturalistic style that reminded me of his work on
Star Trek's "The Corbomite Maneuver," with lots of everyday texture going on in the background. Also some cool Albert Whitlock matte paintings, and some sounds from the Universal sound effects library that would later be used in
The Six Million Dollar Man.
The Final Countdown, starring Kirk Douglas and Martin Sheen features the aircraft carrier Nimitz getting caught in a freak storm that hurtles the vessel back to December 6, 1941. It has a rousing soundtrack by John Scott, mediocre but sufficient special effects, and lots of great carrier and fighter activity. The premise is scientifically flimsy, of course, and is ultimately let down when the film backs away from a full-on conflict with the Japanese. But the what-if premise sure is fun.
I actually find it more plausible than most time-travel movies, because it follows a self-consistent time-loop model rather than the logically inconsistent, physically invalid "changing history" model you usually see. Although I grant that does make for a dramatically weaker climax.
I've always wanted to see a remake featuring the Enterprise (why not?) that doesn't retreat right before Pearl Harbor.
I doubt that would be a good idea. It would probably end up being made by Michael Bay.
Fortunately, the Japanese themselves rose to the task (sort of) with their own Zipang ... an anime production that focuses on the exact same situation (it's the same storm!) involving the Japanese destroyer JDS Mirai right before the battle of Midway.
Sort of reminds me of
Lily C.A.T., an anime movie that's evidently meant to take place in the same universe as
Alien and is something of a semi-remake of it.