With Captain Dildano and the rest of his crew dead, and their ship a derelict, Barbarella is stranded on Lython...
There are more plot elements and characters who ended up in the movie, though at the flick's beginning, rather than midway through, as they do here.
Some characters like "Klill, the horrid little Martian", didn't end up in the film.
The explanation of why the inhabitants are dressed in mid-19th Century Earth fashions was utilized a year later in the Classic Star Trek episode "Squire of Gothos".
However, the "antique-looking" clothing and technology didn't make it into the Barbarella film's version of this sequence.
More Barbarella later...
Friday, May 20, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Jeffrey Catherine Jones 1/10/44 ~ 5/19/11
From Esquire Magazine, 1972 |
Jones' autobiography conveys her life far better than I ever could.
Rest in Peace
Reading Room: BARBARELLA 2.1
When Last We Left Our Heroine...
All you really need to know is that Captain Dildano's spacecraft was forced down by a gigantic jellyfish...ok, plot logic is not the strip's strong suit.
Just enjoy the kool art...
Dildano also dies in the movie, but under vastly different circumstances.
In fact, this particular sequence is not adapted into the 1960s cult classic flick!
More tomorrow!
In fact, this particular sequence is not adapted into the 1960s cult classic flick!
More tomorrow!
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
YouTube Wednesday: The FIRST Live-Action THOR!
Thor (Erik Allan Kramer), Stan Lee, and The Hulk (Lou Ferrigno). |
Though Chris Hemsworth did a smashing job as The Mighty Thor, he wasn't the first choice to personify the God of Thunder in the flesh!
Erik Allan Kramer portrayed a somewhat headstrong Thor in the tv-movie The Incredible Hulk Returns.
Besides the quite-different costume, this version of Thor is two different people, the Thunder God and Don Blake (Steve Levett), a former student of David Banner's (Bill Bixby) who found Mjolnir and can summon Thor from between dimensions by holding the hammer and yelling "ODIN"...
And later the two team-up to...well, you'll get the idea...
Besides being a continuation of The Incredible Hulk tv storyline in a series of tv movies, this was a "backdoor pilot" to promote The Mighty Thor in his own tv series.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Flash Gordon the Movie by Al Williamson
Starting today, the complete, "wide-screen" version of legendary artist Al Wiliamson's graphic novel adaptation of Flash Gordon the Movie (1980) will appear on our brother RetroBlog Secret Sanctum of Captain Video™.
So, why haven't you clicked yet? ;-)
So, why haven't you clicked yet? ;-)
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