It’s entirely possible that some, perhaps many, readers of my
book and/or this blog may not have ever seen a serial, or, for that matter, may
have no idea what the word “serial” means. While researching my book, I’ve met
a number of “twenty-somethings” who have just relished the new Star Wars: The Force Awakens film
(released December 18, 2015) but who drew a blank when I mention that the film
is the seventh chapter in George Lucas’ homage to Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers
serials. For that matter, neither of those proper names rang any bells either.
Therefore, a brief recap of serials is in order before I discuss the films
themselves.
One-sheet poster. |
Cover of Kinnard, Crnkovih, Vitone book. |
In their volume The Flash Gordon Serials: 1936–1940, Roy Kinnard, Tony Crnkovich, and R.J. Viton explain the allure of Flash Gordon and the success of serials:
“Artist/writer Alex Raymond’s newspaper comic strip Flash
Gordon debuted on January 7, 1934, and was an immediate hit with a
Depression-era public sorely in need of escapist adventure. Conceived by
Raymond and the Hearst newspaper chain as competition for the already
established rival strip Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon soon eclipsed Buck in
popularity...."
.
"... In 1935 Universal Pictures—the studio that had startled the world in 1931 with Dracula and Frankenstein—acquired the film rights to several newspaper comic strips published by King Features Syndicate, including properties like Secret Agent X-9, Ace Drummond, Jungle Jim, and Flash Gordon, correctly speculating that the established popularity of the strip characters would virtually guarantee the success of any serial based on them.... [Today] the theatrical movie serial is a long defunct neglected screen format almost forgotten.... Yet these old serials, three of them in particular— the trilogy of Flash Gordon serials starring Buster Crabb—have had a continuing influence on modern films, especially the work of George Lucas in his Star Wars series.”
.
Example of original Alex Raymond's Flash Gordon comic strip, which debuted in newspapers in 1934. |
.
"... In 1935 Universal Pictures—the studio that had startled the world in 1931 with Dracula and Frankenstein—acquired the film rights to several newspaper comic strips published by King Features Syndicate, including properties like Secret Agent X-9, Ace Drummond, Jungle Jim, and Flash Gordon, correctly speculating that the established popularity of the strip characters would virtually guarantee the success of any serial based on them.... [Today] the theatrical movie serial is a long defunct neglected screen format almost forgotten.... Yet these old serials, three of them in particular— the trilogy of Flash Gordon serials starring Buster Crabb—have had a continuing influence on modern films, especially the work of George Lucas in his Star Wars series.”
Universal Pictures was adept with elegant matte paintings. Most of the top of this wonderful establishing shot is a painting. |
The “cliffhanger” was a gimmick that annoyed as much as it
pleased. Each serial chapter would end with the hero in a terrible situation
that could only end in his death—for example, a building blowing up with the
hero still inside—and the next week’s chapter would quickly summarize in words
or drawings the previous week’s story and then show a recap of that bad
business, but this time including a shot or two that had been conveniently left
out the previous week, shots showing how easily the problem was resolved,
allowing our hero to live for another day. In the above example with the
exploding building, the start of the next episode would include a brief shot
showing the hero dodging debris as he ran out of the building just as it
exploded.
But how could such a thing influence Star Wars? In point of fact, George Lucas grew up during the 1950s
when the Flash Gordon serials were often shown on television, usually Saturday
mornings. These shows captured the imaginations of the ten-year-olds who
watched them, positively enthralling them because the shows were so wildly
fantastic, making all too real all sorts of odd beings in armor and helmets and
wielding strange weapons, and the whole effect was mesmerizing. When the time
came for George Lucas to follow up his super-successful American Graffiti, he
decided he wanted to pay tribute to those entertaining serials—that featured
real good guys and real bad guys—and that enchanted him as a child.
Lucas
envisioned 1977’s Star Wars as the
fourth chapter in a hypothetical serial and began it with the yellow scroll
(often used in serials) that summarized the hypothetical (but then nonexistent)
third chapter and then dropped viewers right into the middle of the action.
In 1977, there were many in his audiences who shared that same thrill of watching serials when they were younger and who understood the serial references. But that was forty years ago. While the thrill of seeing a new chapter in a continuing series still is very, very much alive (for that is precisely what Star Wars is and has done with each of its succeeding seven chapters to date, with more to come), the cinematic awareness of historical serials has faded. As stated above, “The theatrical movie serial is a long defunct neglected screen format almost forgotten....”
Top: Crawl from Star
Wars: A New Hope.
Middle: From Buck
Rogers.
Bottom: From Flash
Gordon Conquers the Universe.. |
In 1977, there were many in his audiences who shared that same thrill of watching serials when they were younger and who understood the serial references. But that was forty years ago. While the thrill of seeing a new chapter in a continuing series still is very, very much alive (for that is precisely what Star Wars is and has done with each of its succeeding seven chapters to date, with more to come), the cinematic awareness of historical serials has faded. As stated above, “The theatrical movie serial is a long defunct neglected screen format almost forgotten....”
.
.
Emperor Ming Charles Middleton. |
Source of mysterious ray on Mars. |
From top center, clockwise: “Happy” Hapgood
Donald Kerr. Flash
Gordon Larry (Buster)
Crabbe. Dr. Zarkov
Frank Shannon. Dale Arden
Jean Rogers.
|
Queen Azura Beatrice Roberts. |
Clay King Montague Shaw. |
All three serials are available in boxed sets. |
***
The special visual effect of the Clay People emerging from
and returning into their cave walls is stunning and still shocking. However,
the serial’s spaceship special effects were never especially good, but they have the benefit of inspiring nostalgia.
The dialog is, more often than not, stunningly infantile and redundant and incompetently presented. Yet this serial’s costumes and set design are often quite marvelous. In other words, Flash Gordon’s Trip to Mars is a mixed bag, but that can easily be said of the entire Flash Gordon series and, if truth be told, the whole serial format.
The dialog is, more often than not, stunningly infantile and redundant and incompetently presented. Yet this serial’s costumes and set design are often quite marvelous. In other words, Flash Gordon’s Trip to Mars is a mixed bag, but that can easily be said of the entire Flash Gordon series and, if truth be told, the whole serial format.
Nevertheless, I adore all three Flash Gordon serials, not so
much for reasons of quality but more due to the nostalgia and pleasant memories
that are inseparable from the shows themselves. Besides, it is all too true
that the Star Wars series is little more than Flash Gordon writ large—very
large.
One-sheet for Mars Attacks the World. |
Flash Gordon’s Trip to Mars (Mars Attacks the World) (1938)
USA. Universal Pictures. BW. 15 Chapters. 1.37:1. 300m.
CREW: Directors Ford Beebe, Robert Hill. Script and Original
Story Ray Trampe, Norman S. Hall, Wyndham Gittens, Herbert Dalmas. Based on The
Newspaper Feature Entitled “Flash Gordon” owned and copyrighted by King
Features Syndicate. Comic Strip by Alex Raymond. Associate Producer Barney A.
Sarecky. Director of Photography Jerome Ash. Art Director Ralph DeLacy. Editors Joe Gluck, Saul A. Goodkind, Louis Sackin, Alvin Todd. Costume Designer M.
Berneman.
CAST: Flash Gordon Larry (Buster) Crabbe. Dale Arden Jean
Rogers. Dr. Zarkov Frank Shannon. Emperor Ming Charles Middleton. Queen Azura
Beatrice Roberts. “Happy” Hapgood Donald Kerr. Prince Barin Richard Alexander.
Clay King Montague Shaw.
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Formal Notice: All images, quotations, and video/audio clips used in this blog and in its individual posts are used either with permissions from the copyright holders or through exercise of the doctrine of Fair Use as described in U.S. copyright law, or are in the public domain. If any true copyright holder (whether person[s] or organization) wishes an image or quotation or clip to be removed from this blog and/or its individual posts, please send a note with a clear request and explanation to eely84232@mypacks.net and your request will be gladly complied with as quickly as practical.