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Flash Gordon

  • TV Series
  • 1979–1982
  • TV-Y7
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Flash Gordon (1979)
Hand-Drawn AnimationSuperheroActionAdventureAnimationFantasySci-Fi

The adventures of the comic strip space hero and his friends as they battle the tyranny of Ming the Merciless on the planet Mongo.The adventures of the comic strip space hero and his friends as they battle the tyranny of Ming the Merciless on the planet Mongo.The adventures of the comic strip space hero and his friends as they battle the tyranny of Ming the Merciless on the planet Mongo.

  • Stars
    • Robert Ridgely
    • Alan Oppenheimer
    • Diane Pershing
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Robert Ridgely
      • Alan Oppenheimer
      • Diane Pershing
    • 11User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes24

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    Top cast7

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    Robert Ridgely
    Robert Ridgely
    • Flash Gordon…
    • 1979–1982
    Alan Oppenheimer
    Alan Oppenheimer
    • Ming the Merciless…
    • 1979–1982
    Diane Pershing
    Diane Pershing
    • Dale Arden…
    • 1979–1982
    Allan Melvin
    Allan Melvin
    • Thun…
    • 1979–1982
    Melendy Britt
    Melendy Britt
    • Princess Aura…
    • 1979–1982
    Lou Scheimer
    Lou Scheimer
    • Gremlin…
    • 1979–1982
    Norm Prescott
    • Narrator
    • 1979–1980
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.91.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9schlagzeugplayer

    "The shiny animation"

    When this came out I was hooked 1979 aninated shows were very stale on saturdays then this came out. First thing I noticed was a shinyness to the look and it reminded me of a advanced Johnny Quest and then the story line that I found out from my Dad who saw the serial back in the Phillipines at the movies that, it was pretty true to the classic serial. Then I noticed wow the characters are very well drawn and animated. Later finding out that they were using horoscope to capture a more realistic look. Then at the end a cliff hanger. What? how cool gonna have to watch it episode to episode. So that hooked me. To me the animation even got better later. There is a bit of "that scene again "that's why a 9. Otherwise my choice for one of the best Saturday cartoons ever along w Johnny Quest.
    10bigham78

    One of the best cartoons of all-time

    The 16 episodes are without doubt one of best cartoons of the late 1970's. The graphics sometimes repeated themselves as you saw the same ship getting hit over and over again during some of the battle scenes. But, they had other scenes that were great and the overall story line was great. I only found out later that some of the great facial expressions were the actual actors who did the voices. It should have run more then just one season and the movie they made later. I don't count the 2nd season run later in 1980's as the new episodes were not as good as the ones from 1979. Being a Flash Gordon buff like I was. I loved this cartoon and wish it was available on DVD. I have videos of the originals from the 1930's and Movie made in 1980. I wish I had a copy of this. This was true to comic and the original story and deserves the 10 stars I gave it and two thumbs up.
    9dmann-62849

    A Forgotten Classic

    I only discovered this cartoon in 2021 during the Covid lockdown, and it was a very pleasant surprise for several reasons: it was presented as one long serial broken up into 16 chapters (at least for season 1), it features often gorgeous painted backdrops and solid animation, and had some pulpy adult themes. Pretty well every episode involves Flash, Dale and Zarkov visiting some new kingdom or meeting a new species, usually with a too-literal name like "Arboria" or "Frigia" . There's Hawkmen, Lionmen, Arborians (tree dwellers), giants, dinosaurs, etc. Ming is indeed merciless, Princess Aura a femme fatale, while all the local queens fall in love with Flash as Dale frets in the background. Well deserving of a DVD re-release.
    grendelkhan

    Great adaptation of a classic

    This was the best adaptation of the classic comic strip by Alex Raymond. The series captured both the look of the strip and faithfully adapted the adventures. The 16-part serial format of the first season created added excitement. You had to tune in the next week to find out what would happen. This was almost unheard of for Saturday morning fare. Each episode built on the previous one, with each adventure covering two episodes. The series reached its finale with the final part. A second season followed, but with twelve minute episodes, and featuring a comic relief dragon called Gremlin. Needless to say, it didn't survive.

    Filmation was one of the cheaper animation houses. They produced such cartoons as The Archies, The Groovie Goolies, and Fat Albert in the 70's; and He-Man and She-Ra in the 80's. They were known for their use of stock footage and cheaper voice artists. Their previous pinnacle had been the Star Trek cartoon, featuring the voices of the original cast. Flash gave them a new milestone. Filmation used rotoscoping, a technique where live actors are filmed, and animation is traced over their movements. This gave the characters more fluid movements in many of the action scenes. The design work for the series was a nice blend of Raymond with some Star Wars updating; ironic, since it was Flash Gordon that inspired Lucas to create a sci-fi movie.

    The voice work was quite good, at least the equal to the original movie serials and better than most of the performances in the Sam Jones film. Robert Ridgely gave Flash the right All-American voice, with Allan Oppenheimer (voice of Skeletor in He-Man) as Ming and Zarkov. Diane Pershing gave a light touch to Dale, although she was still mostly just there to be rescued. Melendy Britt gave a very sultry voice to the vixen Aura.

    The series main fault was the overuse of stock footage, which could get annoying. The same Hawkmen were disintegrated, the same ship gets hit in the tail section, the robot soldiers always line up the same way, etc. Still, the stories were good enough to keep you from dwelling on this. Also, the broadcast standards and practices kept the series from having the characters in too much jeopardy. Ming's soldiers were robots and his ships were remotely piloted. However, Hawkmen did disappear, or disintegrate and Barin's ships would as well. Since it was shown that those ships were piloted by humans, it could be assumed that they were killed. They did allow monsters to attack, but they always seemed to be buried under rubble, and never killed. The only other major fault is that the series begins with the Earth trio already orbiting Mongo, with no explanation as to why. This would be cleared up later.

    After the series had been broadcast, a feature version was shown in primetime, on NBC. It included a new opening, establishing how everyone got to Mongo, and included new scenes and voice work. The time period was set at 1939, during the Nazi invasion of Poland. Mongo was given a connection to Hitler. Actually, the feature had been commissioned first; thus, the more detailed backgrounds and fuller animation. The series was commissioned after screening footage from the feature. The feature was used to provide the stock footage for the episodes and wasn't fully broadcast until later.

    This was one of the best Saturday morning cartoons of its era, but, its ratings were never that good. It was retooled for its second season and then quietly disappeared. It later turned up in limited video release and on the Sci-Fi channel. It's worth viewing if you can find the episodes or feature from tape traders. The commercial videos only covered a few episodes.
    ricknorwood

    Bad, really bad. And I'm a fan of Flash Gordon.

    I watched parts of the new DVD version of this series, which I remembered with a certain fondness from the time it was on the air. It starts out looking good -- but that is only because it constantly borrows footage from the much better made-for-TV movie by Sam Peeples, Flash Gordon, the Greatest Adventure of Them All. The movie version was released second, but made first. When you get to the part written by Ted Pederson, the only good thing you can say about it is that it follows the Alex Raymond comic strip. But why watch the film when you can read the strip, which has been reprinted many times? The dialog is rudimentary, the animation is pathetic. When it is not borrowing footage from somewhere else, the animation often doesn't even fit the action, or the action takes place off stage so they can reuse some footage that doesn't really belong. For example, in the underwater sequence, the characters walk underwater as often as they swim, so the animator can reuse walking footage. Have you ever tried to walk upright under water? The second season, which introduces a cowardly baby dragon who is supposed to be cute but is only annoying, is even worse. The dragon is a rip-off of Godzookie, the Godzilla sidekick. I'm sorry to say, give this DVD a pass. Watch the Buster Crabbe serials instead -- they may be cheap, but at least they are fun.

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    Action
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    Fantasy
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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Dino De Laurentiis became a "ghost" producer on the series when Filmation developed monetary problems completing the animation involving the use of computers to create the spaceship animation, one of the first uses of computers in traditional animation. Since DeLaurentis was seeking the rights for the use of the Flash Gordon property for a live action film, and Filmation held the rights for all filmed media for the Flash Gordon characters, Filmation and DeLaurentis came to a deal. In exchange for the funding to complete the animation on the series, DeLaurentis would get the live action film rights to Flash Gordon while Filmation would retain the rights to animated projects featuring Flash Gordon.
    • Quotes

      Flash Gordon: Blasting off on a desperate mission to save Earth from the evil plottings of the tyrannical space lord Ming the Merciless, Dr. Hans Zarkov and Dale Arden have joined me, Flash Gordon, on a fantastic journey into worlds where peril and adventure await us.

    • Connections
      Edited into Flash Gordon: The Greatest Adventure of All (1982)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 8, 1979 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The New Adventures of Flash Gordon
    • Production companies
      • Filmation Associates
      • King Features Syndicate
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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