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Flash Gordon

  • 1980
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
64 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
3 644
396
Flash Gordon (1980)
When energy waves pull the moon out of orbit, New York Jets quarterback Flash Gordon unwittingly finds himself heading for the planet Mongo, where - with assistance from beautiful Dale Arden - he'll take on Ming the Merciless and rescue humankind.
Lire trailer0:59
2 Videos
99+ photos
ActionAventureScience-fictionScience fiction spatialeScience-fiction dystopiqueSuper héros

Un joueur de football et ses amis partent pour la planète Mongo, où ils se retrouvent pris au coeur de la lutte contre le tyrannique Ming. Leur mission : sauver la Terre.Un joueur de football et ses amis partent pour la planète Mongo, où ils se retrouvent pris au coeur de la lutte contre le tyrannique Ming. Leur mission : sauver la Terre.Un joueur de football et ses amis partent pour la planète Mongo, où ils se retrouvent pris au coeur de la lutte contre le tyrannique Ming. Leur mission : sauver la Terre.

  • Réalisation
    • Mike Hodges
  • Scénario
    • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
    • Michael Allin
    • Alex Raymond
  • Casting principal
    • Sam J. Jones
    • Melody Anderson
    • Max von Sydow
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    64 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    3 644
    396
    • Réalisation
      • Mike Hodges
    • Scénario
      • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
      • Michael Allin
      • Alex Raymond
    • Casting principal
      • Sam J. Jones
      • Melody Anderson
      • Max von Sydow
    • 358avis d'utilisateurs
    • 169avis des critiques
    • 58Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 2 victoires et 14 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:59
    Trailer
    Flash Gordon
    Trailer 1:02
    Flash Gordon
    Flash Gordon
    Trailer 1:02
    Flash Gordon

    Photos287

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    + 280
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Sam J. Jones
    Sam J. Jones
    • Flash Gordon
    Melody Anderson
    Melody Anderson
    • Dale Arden
    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • The Emperor Ming
    • (as Max Von Sydow)
    Topol
    Topol
    • Dr. Hans Zarkov
    Ornella Muti
    Ornella Muti
    • Princess Aura
    Timothy Dalton
    Timothy Dalton
    • Prince Barin
    Brian Blessed
    Brian Blessed
    • Prince Vultan
    Peter Wyngarde
    Peter Wyngarde
    • Klytus
    Mariangela Melato
    Mariangela Melato
    • Kala
    John Osborne
    • Arborian Priest
    Richard O'Brien
    Richard O'Brien
    • Fico
    John Hallam
    John Hallam
    • Luro
    Philip Stone
    Philip Stone
    • Zogi, the High Priest
    Suzanne Danielle
    Suzanne Danielle
    • Serving Girl
    William Hootkins
    William Hootkins
    • Munson
    Bobbie Brown
    • Hedonia
    Ted Carroll
    Ted Carroll
    • Biro
    Adrienne Kronenberg
    • Vultan's Daughter
    • Réalisation
      • Mike Hodges
    • Scénario
      • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
      • Michael Allin
      • Alex Raymond
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs358

    6,564.4K
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    Avis à la une

    7dglink

    Visually and Aurally Dazzling Update of the 1930's Serials

    Colorful, silly fun, at times campy, Mike Hodges's 1980 "Flash Gordon" is among those movies that are less than the sum of their parts. Made on shoe-string budgets with C-picture performers and crew for young undemanding viewers, the original 1930's Flash Gordon serials are unintentionally funny to adults today. To recapture the innocence and naivete of those movies with a big budget and trained actors is a difficult task, although Hodges's "Flash Gordon" makes a decent attempt. Lorenzo Semple's screenplay tracks the original serials fairly well; Flash and Dale Arden are taken aboard Doctor Hans Zarkov's spacecraft and flown to the planet Mongo, where they battle Emperor Ming the Merciless to save the Earth. Semple's script has enough classic bad dialog to satisfy seekers of camp; "I love you Flash, but we only have 14 hours to save the Earth." However, the difference between Semple's script and the original series is that Semple knew he was writing bad dialog, while the writers of the serial were unintentionally hilarious.

    That difference in intention also applies to the actors; Buster Crabbe and company played the serials dead-pan straight, and those in the remake who play their parts equally straight come off best. The under-demanding role of Flash requires the skills of a Razzie Award Winning thespian, and, Sam J. Jones won a Razzie nomination for his work herein. Although not a super hero in the modern sense, the blonde hunk, who sports nothing but leather trunks in one scene, physically fills the role, and Jones manages to deliver his lines with a convincing lack of conviction as the dim, but well meaning Flash. However, the movie's scene-stealer is Max Von Sydow as Ming the Merciless; appropriately garbed and made-up as the evil emperor, Von Sydow plays the role with majesty and menace, which is all the more fun. Unfortunately, Topol as Doctor Zarkov, does not follow Von Sydow's example and winks and smiles as the mad scientist, telegraphing to viewers that he is in on the joke. But Brian Blessed as the winged Prince Vultan, Timothy Dalton as Prince Barin, and, especially, the delicious Peter Wyngarde as Klytus deliver their lines as though penned by the Bard himself. Although Mariangela Melato is a memorable Kala, Melody Anderson as Dale Arden should have been in the running for a Razzie alongside Jones, which is intended as a compliment.

    Besides Von Sydow, the film's other scene-stealer is designer Danilo Donati, who provided the lavish Fellini-esque costumes and sets. While Donati's work tends to emphasize red and gold, which may not be to everyone's taste, his outlandish designs are as entertaining as anything on display and certainly light years beyond those of the 1930's serials. If Donati or another anonymous designer created the Art-Deco spaceships, he or she too deserves kudos as do the creators of the appropriately tacky and obvious special effects, which beautifully evoke the primitive work of the 1930's serials. As contemporary and important as the art direction is the pulsating score by Queen that punctuates the action and enhances the excitement. While "Flash Gordon" is not the high camp perhaps intended, the film has a cult following and enough outstanding attributes to satisfy main-stream audiences. Led by Max Von Sydow's iconic Ming the Merciless, Queen's pounding music, and Danilo Donati's dazzling designs, "Flash Gordon" may not be to everybody's taste, but should be savored by all at least once, just for the sheer fun of it all.
    7AaronCapenBanner

    Crazy But Fun

    No other film is like this one, as Sam J. Jones plays the title character, based on the famous comic strip and early Saturday morning serials with Buster Crabbe. Max Von Sydow is the evil Ming the Merciless, ruler of Mongo, who is trying to destroy Earth because he is bored. Melody Anderson is Dale Arden, in love with Flash and coveted by Ming. Topol is Dr. Hans Zarkhov, whose rocket ship took the three of them to Mongo in the first place. Brian Blessed is extremely enthusiastic as Prince Vultan, Pre-James Bond Timothy Dalton is quite serious as Prince Barin, rival of Vultan, and in love with Ming's ultra sensuous daughter Princess Aura(Ornella Muti) All will converge in the exciting finale where Flash must save the day.

    Crazy film is nonetheless great fun, no point in taking this seriously, since everything about it is intentionally over the top, punctuated by a soaring score and incredible sets and costumes. Not to be over thought or have all kinds of subtext in it, just sit back and enjoy!
    9bstormy

    Knowingly Camp version of matinée sci-fi classic

    During the middle section of this movie, our hero 'Flash' Gordon, accompanied by Ornella "Most beautiful woman in the world" Muti, witnesses ex Bond Timothy Dalton giving ex Blue Peter presenter Peter Duncan the sweet merciful release of death by putting him to the(cardboard) sword (offscreen). "Its an initiation" purrs the shapely Muti, "I just love initiations".

    This 1980 version of the perennial Saturday morning sci-fi cliffhanger is a feast for the senses. That is, if your senses crave lashings of junkfood. With an eye meltingly lurid palette of colours and rocktastic Queen soundtrack Flash Gordon was the perfectly overblown movie for the start of an overblown decade. The costumes are extravagantly cheesy, the effects farcical, the acting hilarious.

    Almost every minor character was hammed up to perfection by the cream (or perhaps custard) of character actors of the time including such luminaries as Rocky Horrors Richard O Brien, Phillip "I corrected them" Stone from the Shining and the half-man, half-beast that is Brian Blessed.

    The only minor flaw in this popcorn delight is the fact that it is, in almost every way - a terrible, awful movie - I HIGHLY recommend it.
    7stiv-7

    20 years don't make a difference

    Some childhood obsessions stay with you for life, and Flash would have to be one of them. In fact, Flash Gordon, Star Wars, and Battlestar Galactica began a lifelong obsession with science fiction and fantasy in all of its good (and especially) bad forms. The above summary isn't really accurate; 20 years don't make a difference to how much I like this film, but they have changed my reasons for liking it. With hindsight, I've discovered exactly who Lorenzo Semple Jr. is, and now, fully understanding the camp elements of this film, I can still enjoy it, but on a completely new level. As for complaints about the acting of Sam Jones (who did much worse in the abysmal firefighter series Code Red) and Melody Anderson, you hire actors for what they can do, not what they can't. This is why Keanu Reeves was perfect for The Matrix, and why Arnold Schwarzenegger was perfect for The Terminator. Jones and Anderson serve the same purpose for Semple as Adam West and Burt Ward did in the Batman series; who better than someone sadly lacking in acting skills to deliver a completely ludicrous line with a straight face? Unless your name is Charlton Heston, experienced actors have a difficult time with it. Anyways, I digress. The things that first attracted me to this film still do it for me, and that would be the production values and special effects, not to mention the great soundtrack by Queen (I actually had a friend consider using Brian May's arrangement of the Wedding March at his wedding; his mother, of course, ixnayed it). This is still a great looking movie, even by today's standards, which makes me wonder if DeLaurentiis was in on the joke the whole time. All in all, a lot of fun, unless you get offended by less than faithful revisions, in which case I have to wonder about your upbringing.
    7mentalcritic

    The power of a story over a budget

    In 1980, science fiction was undergoing a revival of sorts. Some would argue that it is unfortunate that the science fiction appearing on the big screens of the time were more action-oriented than dramatic in nature. Flash Gordon came at a time when audiences were being trained to expect more and more from their films, with budgets skyrocketing and effects becoming progressively more important than the story. It is therefore somewhat disheartening to see reviewers focusing on how camp or low-fi they perceive it to be. Camp, low-budget, low-fi it is, but it has something that Episode 2 of Star Wars in particular didn't. Namely, it has the ingredients of a rollicking good time. From the awesome soundtrack by Queen to the near-ridiculous action sequences, Flash Gordon is almost the last hurrah in an era where filmmakers were expected to spend at least as much time on script and dialogue as they do eye candy. What makes it all the more interesting is that beyond the basic setup, there almost is no story to speak of.

    Beginning with a POV shot from some distant planet, we see how the world we take for granted is suddenly subjected to all sorts of destructive weather patterns by its Emperor. Emperor Ming has decided to shift the orbit of the moon in order to make it collide with Earth, leaving a handful of days before all life on the planet is destroyed. Not one to take this kind of thing lying down, a scientist by the name of Hans Zarkov is busily building a rocket so that he might go to the source of the attacks and reason with them. Coincidentally, a plane carrying football star Flash Gordon and some girl called Dale Arden crash into Zarkov's lab. Tricking them into boarding his rocket, Zarkov takes them on a brief trip to a world so barren one wonders where they find the liquid to sustain themselves. Taken captive and escorted to the Emperor, our heroes bear witness to a society in which Lords of several moons pay tribute to said Emperor. With their lives, if need be. The real fun begins when Ming takes an interest in Dale.

    Interest is putting it mildly. In a classic script oversight, Ming decides within a moment of first seeing her that he wants Dale to do with as he will. Flash is naturally not one to take such things lying down, so he begins attacking Ming's guards with a series of offensive football-style strikes. This gets the attention of several Lords who have been awaiting the right moment to overthrow Ming, but the fight is lost before it has begun, for obvious reasons. Overpowered, Flash is sentenced to execution, and thus the first of many bondage-like outfits is seen. I am not one to cry out "gay" when I see two men express a powerful bond, but several people I have watched the film with now agree that Flash Gordon has one of the biggest gay, or S&M, themes going in 1980s film. Not that this is particularly important, but the amount of leather underwear and tights on display would have made the Village People blush. Of course, this is all just one adult subtext that will go right over the head of the children in the audience.

    One commendable feature of Flash Gordon is the death scenes. Aiming a film at children and dispatching characters in a violent fashion is always a tricky business. This adaptation gets around the issue by showing the alien creatures melting after they are killed. The manner in which this is filmed would probably get Flash Gordon a more restrictive rating if it were released for the first time today. It reminds me in part of a description in Repo Man. Eyes, skin, even bones melt in a manner that tells us how alien the villains are in a way that all the prosthetics in the world cannot. Roger Ebert was right on the money when he wrote that Flash Gordon "is cheerfully willing to look as phony as it is". That he didn't mean it as a criticism shows that he got what the film was about. During action sequences, it assaults the senses and almost bullies the viewer into forgetting that what they are seeing is anything but real. During extended moments of dialogue, it flat out orders you to not take it seriously.

    Making it all the funnier is that producer Dino De Laurentiis, that famed bankrupt-wannabe, thought the whole story was serious. As director Mike Hodges phrased it, anyone who watches the film will find that factoid "rather curious". Sam Jones is absolutely terrible as the titular hero, and yet it works because a certain idiocy is what the character requires. Really, the whole thing reeks of being rushed into production, and then rushed to theatre screens, which probably sealed its financial doom. Hodges apparently had to work with a crew whose language he did not speak, with a script that wasn't finished, and no storyboards to boot. Having seen the finished product on DVD after all these years, I have to confess that my respect for Hodges has gone right through the roof in light of this. Forget Flash - Hodges is the one who can rightfully claim to be king of the impossible. Anyway, when all is said and done, Flash Gordon is representative of the direction cinema might well have been better off taking.

    For these reasons and more, I gave Flash Gordon circa 1980 a seven out of ten. Excitement and adventure always beat a big budget, as this film proves.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Flash jumping towards the camera screaming "YEAH!" was improvised by Sam J. Jones. Nobody could figure out how to end the movie.
    • Gaffes
      At the very beginning of the film, Ming and his henchman are discussing "an obscure body in the SK system", which the inhabitants refer to as the planet "Earth", pronounced as if the word is completely foreign to them. However, at that moment, Ming activates a button on his console labeled "Earth Quake".
    • Citations

      Dale Arden: Ming's not unbeatable. With all his men, he couldn't even kill Flash.

      Prince Vultan: [incredulous] Gordon's alive?

    • Crédits fous
      When the ending title appears, a hand picks up Ming's ring and Ming is heard laughing. A "?" appears, making it "THE END?"
    • Versions alternatives
      The Wide Screen VHS version released by BMG contains all the cut scenes in their complete and uncut version.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Queen: Flash (1980)
    • Bandes originales
      Flash's Theme
      Written by Brian May

      Produced by Brian May and Mack (Reinhold Mack)

      Performed by Queen

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    FAQ

    • How long is Flash Gordon?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Why do the Hawkmen use rocket cycles if they have wings and, therefore, can fly by themselves?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 janvier 1981 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
      • Pays-Bas
      • Italie
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Флеш Ґордон
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Airstrip, Breakish, Skye, Highland, Écosse, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • Starling Films
      • Famous Films (II)
      • Dino De Laurentiis Company
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 20 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 27 107 960 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 3 934 030 $US
      • 7 déc. 1980
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 27 186 606 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 51 minutes
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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