Flash Gordon, Dale Arden and Dr. Alexis Zarkov visit the planet Mongo to thwart the evil schemes of Emperor Ming the Merciless, who has set his planet on a collision course with Earth.Flash Gordon, Dale Arden and Dr. Alexis Zarkov visit the planet Mongo to thwart the evil schemes of Emperor Ming the Merciless, who has set his planet on a collision course with Earth.Flash Gordon, Dale Arden and Dr. Alexis Zarkov visit the planet Mongo to thwart the evil schemes of Emperor Ming the Merciless, who has set his planet on a collision course with Earth.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- King Kala [Chs. 2-5]
- (as Duke York Jr.)
- Hawkman Throne Room Guard
- (uncredited)
- Throne Guard
- (uncredited)
- Woman in Ming's Palace
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
1) The Planet of Peril ("O Planeta do Perigo") 2) The Tunnel of Horror ("O Túnel do Terror") 3) Captured by Shark Men ("Capturado Pelos Homens-Tubarão") 4) Battling the Sea Beast ("Enfrentando a Fera do Mar") 5) The Destroying Ray ("O Raio da Destruição") 6) Flaming Torture ("Tortura Flamejante") 7) Shattering Doom ("Perdição Quebrada") 8) Tournament of Death ("Torneio da Morte") 9) Fighting the Fire Dragon ("Lutando Contra o Dragão de Fogo") 10) The Unseen Peril ("O Perigo Invisível") 11) In the Claws of the Tigron ("Nas Garras de Tigron") 12) Trapped in the Turret ("Encurralado na Torre") 13) Rocketing to Earth ("Voando Para a Terra")
The adventure of Flash Gordon in Planet Mongo shows all the characters of the comic strip: he becomes friend of the Prince Thun (James Pierce), the leader of the Lion Men, a people enemy of Ming. He is arrested by the Shark Men in the underwater Shark Palace of King Kala (Duke York Jr.), who is dominated by Ming. Flash Gordon allies to Prince Barin (Richard Alexander), who claims to be the inheritor of the Mongo's throne, and they fight against the Hawk Men, leaded by King Vultan (Jack 'Tiny' Lipson), in the palace in the air, becoming allied in the end.
In the Twentieth-First Century, the special effects of this film are very cheesy and dated, like in an Ed Wood movie: visible wires holding rockets and flying objects, quite ridiculous "maquettes" of the cities, the fire dragon, the fly and movements of the rockets with fire in the propellers, even the behavior of the character of Dale Arden, screaming, fainting, being paralyzed in the dangerous situations are very funny in the present days. But this is part of the entertainment, and the viewer must appreciate the film never forgetting when it was shot (1936). For the Brazilian readers, I would like to inform that the DVD released by Classicline has some mistakes in the translation. Inclusive some titles in Portuguese of the chapters written on back cover of the DVD are not correlated with the titles showed in the beginning of each chapter in the movie. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Flash Gordon no Planeta Mongo" ("Flash Gordon in the Planet Mongo")
There is really a little of everything in this serial: There are lion-men, hawk-men, shark-men, Earthmen, & I guess you'd call em Mongo-men. The sets & costumes combine, Greek, Roman, Oriental, Egyptian and there's even armour like English knights. Awesome costumes. And some of it was a riot. Those horrible tights with shorts over em worn by Zarkov are beyond description. And the guys in the furnace scene seem to be wearing boxers.
It's also funny the way they renamed the octopus to an octosack, the orangutan to orangapoid, and the tiger to a tigron. There's even a dragon (a Godzilla-like creature who threatens Flash on a couple of occasions before being killed off).
You like the Invisible Man? This has got you covered. You like sword fights, wrestling (both animals & men), fist fights? Plenty for any taste. We have an underwater city, a sky city, a city on top of a mountain, and tonnes of secret passages and caves.
Hokey effects? Massive amounts. The sky city is supported by radium furnaces stoked like old-time steamships. The rocketships are "powered" by fireworks and have constant backfires and/or humming noises. Lots of wires are visible holding things up (like food when Flash was invisible and of course rocketships). There's clouds out in space, but none around the earth when viewed from Mongo. "Giant" lizards show up briefly. Fighting sea creatures supposedly threaten Flash & co. on the way to the shark-men's underwater city. The "gadgets" in Dr. Zarkov's lab crack me up. And they seem to be the same ones no matter what lab he's in (he worked in Ming's lab and Vultan's).
And yeah, we have romance. Everyone wants Dale; Ming, Vultan, Flash. But at least one person wanted Princess Aura (Prince Baron) just not the person she would have preferred. In fact, it seems a lot of the sub-plots concern intrigue on the part of Princess Aura to try to win Flash.
Man I think the characters are awesome. That fat, horse-laughing, King Vultan was hilarious. How he managed those wings was pure artistry. And Ming! What can I say about Ming? He was perfect. They should have had him for the emperor in Starwars. Ming has got to be my favourite character in this serial. Princess Aura was quite a little character too. And she pulled it off nicely. I think she's a better actress than Dale Arden by a long shot. Even the sneaky high priest had a distinctive role. Zarkov was good, but not the strongest character---and he always stood in the background during fight scenes holding Dale. Now we get to Flash: Flash, of course, was the strong point, the leader, the hero---and he did it well. Crabbe is a good actor and this role fit him perfectly.
After watching this, I think I know where George Lucas got the main idea for Starwars. Watch this, you'll see what I mean.
If you ever considered watching an old serial (or any serial for that matter), this should be your first choice. The only reason I didn't give this one a 10 is because of a few story holes that could have been fixed easily, the way the giant lizards seemed just tacked in there, and a couple of weak characters (king of shark-men & king of lion-men).
and 1940; but despite the larger budgets of the latter two, the first
is the by far the most fun; its successors are pale in comparison,
although the Clay People of Series II are certainly worth while. I
loved the 1936 serial dearly when I was five years old, seeing it on
TV; and I still retain a good deal of affection for it, even now when I
am old enough to be aware of the cardboard sets, ridiculous
dialogue and frequent lapses of taste. Who cares? Flash's
adventures have nothing to do with outer space and are largely
medieval, as this 1930s art deco Siegfried battles shark men,
hawk men, and cheesy rubber dragons. Buster Crabbe is ideal,
and Charles Middleton positively believes he IS Ming the
Merciless. Then there is Princess Aura. I don't know about the rest
of you male types out there, but if I were Flash I would have
dumped Dale for Priscilla Lawson's voluptuous princess by
Episode Two. Besides the perfectly obvious fact that she would be
vastly more fun in bed, consider: When Flash is in horrible danger,
what does Dale do? She faints, or gets hypnotised. Aura,
meanwhile, has swiped a rocket ship, bribed the guards, found a
cache of weapons, and is actively doing her best to rescue the
guy. She saves Flash's butt from certain horrible death about every
other episode, but does the big lunk appreciate it? Oh well. Even
when I was five I was dimly aware that there was some reason I
wanted her to take me home with her... and above all, there's
Frank Shannon's Zarkov. "You are a remarkable man. I can use
you" says Emperor Ming; and what Zarkov doesn't say, but is
clearly thinking, is: "and I can use a blithering mad emperor with
unlimited power and a fantastic laboratory"! My favorite dialogue in
the whole serial comes in Episode One. Zarkov and Flash have
just met, and Zarkov explains that the Earth's only hope of survival
is his home built rocket ship. "Sure this thing will work?" asks
Flash, after they've come aboard. "I've experimented with models"
Zarkov replies. "Ah," responds Flash; "They ever come back?" With
perfect equanimity Zarkov says "They weren't supposed to." Now,
there's a REAL Mad Scientist after my own heart! Zarkov routinely
invents the impossible on five minutes notice, from invisibility rays
to anti-gravitons. The whole thing is so absurd it's magnificent, so
hokey it's colossal. It's for the precocious five-year-old in us all.
Flash starts out as a young man on a plane who is preoccupied about the planet which is about to slam into the earth, destroying everything, and the very pretty girl sitting next to him (Jean Rogers). The passengers bail out and the plane crashes. Flash saves the girl and lands near a rocket ship designed to solve the interplanetary problem by a seemingly deranged but very brilliant scientist (Frank Shannon). And the adventures have just begun.
As the serial progresses, we meet Ming the Merciless - self-proclaimed Emperor of the Universe; an enormous jovial winged king with the attention span of a chickadee; an honorable and huge prince clad in Roman armor with a sword and a fleet of rocket ships; a conniving princess who wants to possess Flash, a despicable high priest, and a tribe of enslaved space hippies who Flash will eventually inspire to great deeds.
Some of the dialog is predictably corny, but overall, the stories are cleverly plotted, well edited and very well directed. The special effects are good for their time, and the costuming is terrific. There is a lot of action and a lot of dialog. Most of the acting is surprisingly good, but there are a few glaringly bad exceptions. These little problems don't really reduce the entertainment value of the films however.
There are no great philosophical points you can take home from these films, but they do exactly what they were intended to do quite well - they entertain and stimulate the imagination. Good enough for me!
Did you know
- TriviaDespite its large budget, this serial utilized many sets from other Universal films, such as the laboratory and crypt set from La Fiancée de Frankenstein (1935), the castle interiors from La Fille de Dracula (1936), the idol from La Momie (1932) and the opera house interiors from Le Fantôme de l'opéra (1925). In addition, the outer walls of Ming's castle were actually the cathedral walls from Notre-Dame de Paris (1923).
- GoofsWhen Flash first enters the shark men's craft he and Dale are soaked from being in the water. However, in the next shot they are completely dry.
- Quotes
Ming the Merciless: I will destroy your earth in my own way!
Dr. Alexis Zarkov: Why destroy the Earth? Why not conquer it?
Ming the Merciless: [envisioning the suggestion] Why not? How did you enter my kingdom?
Dr. Alexis Zarkov: On a rocket ship of my own design.
Ming the Merciless: You are a remarkable man! I can use you.
Ming the Merciless: [directing his guards] Take him to a laboratory. Give him everything he requires... except his freedom!
- Crazy creditsThe final scene of all three Flash Gordon serials is a ticker tape parade, taken from a silent serial. None of the characters appear in this ending.
- ConnectionsEdited from Bombay Mail (1934)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Flash Gordon: Space Soldiers
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $360,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 4h 5m(245 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1