![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhTg-SQOIQLp1iJdA_amiLrTJBCYc-4lKnsZYn6o69Hx4bfZJRnKMwIvM6h3SOinMNwwKuKRHqjZ5DwYXt_vPZyKqQ2PdMSsWLVUzkUiLsNXHnKA7n7PT3LP3yflVq3wg6g3uAeEGANNTE/s200/Al+Williamson+Flash+Gordon+Pinup.jpg)
Flash was the subject of what is also generally regarding as the three greatest movie serials ever made due, in no small part, to the performance of actor Charles Middleton as Ming The Merciless. And he had all the other media tie-ins: a radio series starring Gale Gordon (yep; Lucille Ball’s foil), a teevee series staring future Doc Savage model Steve Holland and a teevee series on Sci-Fi last year that was completely unwatchable, various animated series, a movie feature and another one in pre-production and numerous comic books by people including Archie Goodwin, Al Williamson, Reed Crandall, and Wally Wood, and licensed items. When Raymond went off to war, he was replaced by a series of artists nearly equal to him in talent: Austin Briggs, Mac Raboy (my favorite), and Dan Barry.
There’s a reason why Flash Gordon attracted such top-rank talent. Sadly, that’s also the same reason why Flash Gordon is an icon and no longer active in our contemporary entertainment: nostalgia. Flash Gordon was a product of his times, a wondrous visionary made irrelevant by real-life heroes such as Laika the dog, the first living being to orbit the Earth, and Yuri Gagaran, the first human being to orbit the Earth. Only Yuri returned alive, but I digress.
No comments:
Post a Comment