Ever so slightly mad scientist Dr Hans Zarkoff (Topol, who like Prince and
Madonna only needs one damn name, thank you very much) is convinced that the
series of seemingly natural catastrophes hitting earth is caused by alien
forces. As your do, he has built a rocket in his own, large, shed, to prove it
and save Earth, too, but it turns out to find co-pilots willing and able to push
down one foot pedal lest one’s rocket explodes is rather more difficult than
you’d expect. Fortunately, said (un)natural catastrophes do lead to a plane
crash right into Zarkoff’s rocket barn. On board the plane are football star
Flash Gordon (Sam Jones) and his instant love interest Dale Arden (Melody
Anderson), and they are easily convinced to help out with the Earth saving when
threatened with a gun.
Once the trio is in space, Zarkoff turns out to have been perfectly right.
Evil space Emperor Ming (Max von Sydow) of the planet Mongo is trying to destroy
Earth for his entertainment. Fortunately, Flash turns out to be a proper,
pure-hearted hero in the Captain America-mold, so Project: Save Earth just might
proceed eventually.
As anyone who knows me or has been reading this blog for a bit will probably
know, I’m not a fan of camp at all, nor of that most horrible of all sins a
movie fan can commit – liking things ironically. So my deep and abiding love for
Mike Hodges’s certainly very campy Flash Gordon doesn’t really fit my
usual viewing habits. But then, I don’t love this film ironically but with all
of my heart; and the film’s camp sensibilities seem mostly to consist of
allowing itself to become as artificial and strange as possible, the people
involved finding the point where even the strangest shit becomes joyful.
Mike Hodges (much beloved around here for Get Carter,
Croupier and I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead) seems like a strange choice
of director for an adaptation of a classic movie serial/comic strip, and you’d
certainly not approach making a science fiction adventure movie as he does
today, but he clearly brought a wild visual imagination and a sense for goofy
joy to the proceedings his other films (you might exclude Pulp) weren’t
the place to demonstrate. Hodges also turns out to be a master of how to pace
this sort of crazy space adventure, which is breathlessly and with something
exciting happening every single second.
Aesthetically, in design and and stylistic approach, the film has something
of the fever dream of a pubescent boy (that’s a compliment) mixed with a bit of
LSD, as realized via special effects that often seem to consciously point back
in the direction of the Flash Gordon serial, and others that have their
basis more in stage special effects than what you’d expect any typical effects
crew of a 1980s film to come up with. If you can get rid of that pesky idea of
realism, the things the film has to show, its series of increasingly bizarre
costumes, its multi-coloured liquid skies, the pantomime style creatures, are
true wonders to behold, and look like nothing you’ll see in any other SF movie.
Well, I suspect some of the SF films of Alfredo Brescia would have loved to look
like Flash does, yet never had the money or the craftsmen, but that’s
about it. If you always imagined your space operas to look like a dream of
adventure and space rather than an attempt to mimic reality, this is the film
for you.
Adding to this very special sense of wonder is a soundtrack by Queen I am
contractually obliged to describe as “ass-kicking”. It also happens to be true.
Queen, much like Flash Gordon, were of course masters at being
absolutely sincere in their campiness, overblown in a way that’s meant to build
an exciting dream world simply bigger and more interesting than reality, and
therefore the perfect fit for the things their guitars, synths and Mercurys
accompany.
But that’s not all what I love about the film. It also doubles down on the
kinky aspects of the material it adapts to a nearly ridiculous degree, so much
so that I have not the faintest idea how a film featuring Ming mindwhammying
Dale to a public orgasm or Ornella Muti’s Princess Aura sticking her tongue into
whatever male mouth available, and which clearly thinks that slightly (or very)
weird sex stuff is simply fun did get a PG rating at the time. Sure, there’s a
deplorable lack of nudity, but much of the film seems so sexually overheated in
various kinky manners that undressing anyone just seems like overkill. I would
be very surprised if Hodges and the scriptwriters hadn’t studied Flesh
Gordon quite extensively, is what I’m saying.
Because that’s still not enough, Hodges also manages to often turn a
film made of the stuff of dreams, plain weird shit and basically anti-realistic
special effects into a thing of great excitement, turning out big “fuck yeah”
moments again and again, even if his hawk men carry the most un-flightworthy
wings imaginable and his hero happens to ride an improbable silver air/space
scooter. The film’s just shamelessly going with it all, and you’d be a sad old
coot not to enjoy it.
The actors sure seem to enjoy themselves, too. Sam Jones – probably
fortuitously – is the eternal heart on his sleeve straight man to a whole horde
of scenery chewers doing their spirited best, with Brian Blessed doing his Brian
Blessed thing to a blessed degree, while von Sydow, sporting some of the most
gloriously absurd costumes imaginable, achieves astonishing feats of BIG GOOFY
YET SERIOUS EVIL BORN FROM BOREDOM. And that’s only the most obvious two in a
horde of actors all tuning into exactly the same frequency. Even better –
nobody, and I mean absolutely nobody, in the cast seems to come to the material
from a position of superiority. Instead, everyone digs into the absurdity of
much of what’s going on and treats it like it was Shakespeare, treating the
often wonderfully bizarre dialogue to the most incredible line readings. It’s
glorious and wondrous to behold (and hear), but then, so is everything else
about this film.
Wednesday, May 29, 2019
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