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Serial Killer

“Flash Gordon” / Guest Critic Deus Ex Malcontent

TV Reviews | August 15, 2007 | Comments (47)


When I first heard that Flash Gordon would be returning to television, I admit my interest was mildly piqued. Although never a die-hard fan of the original comic or serial — both were well before my time — I’ll be the first to proudly proclaim my odd and unyielding devotion to the absolutely God-awful 1980 movie starring Sam J. Jones, Melody Anderson and, for reasons unknown to this day, a host of people who could actually act. In addition to being the single worst career move in Brian Blessed’s lifetime — as there’s little doubt that he’s since been forced to endure frequent and infuriating shouts of “DIVE!” from various live audiences while attempting to perform, say, Shakespeare’s Richard III on the Haymarket stage in London — the film is best remembered for its campy style, punctuated by a brilliantly absurd score from Queen.

I was curious as to whether the new series would take the traditional route or purposely party like it’s 1980 and go completely over-the-top. Regardless, it had one thing going for it right off the bat — it was being given a run on cable’s Sci-Fi network, which, despite having successfully exhausted the entire “-Saurus” genre, had carved out a place in my heart by bringing the whip-smart reimagining of “Battlestar Galactica” to television.

So, yesterday, I downloaded the pilot episode of the new “Flash Gordon” free on iTunes, settled in with a bag of Bugles and a depth-charge-sized cup of Crystal-Lite raspberry lemonade and watched from start-to-finish.

And?

It’s just fucking terrible.

I’m not talking destined-for-kitschy-cult-classic-status terrible; I’m talking unwatchably bad.

The entire thing feels like an Ark II-esque Saturday-morning venture (and not in the good, old-serial sort of way), it looks like it was produced — special effects and all — by a junior high AV class, and the dialogue sounds as if it were written by Dawson of “Dawson’s Creek” when he first got that Spielberg jones — say, around age five.

The goddamned thing was free, and I still wanted my money back.

I found myself immediately demanding to know just who was responsible for such a painful atrocity, as I hadn’t done much in the way of research before sitting down to watch — nor would I be able to live with myself had I actually taken the time to delve too deeply into the parentage of fucking Flash Gordon. That’s when I realized that I had missed the opening credits entirely — no doubt in the kitchen at the time, grabbing the aforementioned Bugles and Crystal-Lite.

So I skipped back to the beginning, careful not to subject myself to even a momentary second-viewing of the nonsense I’d just witnessed, and when I got there, you can imagine my surprise — or complete lack thereof — at what I found.

Robert Halmi Sr.

The Godather of crap.

For the blissfully uninitiated, Robert Halmi Sr. was once known as the “King of the Mini-Series.” He was the man responsible (read: to blame) for an entire swath of supposedly epic, Tolkein-on-the-cheap, TV sweeps extravaganzas — beginning with Gulliver’s Travels in 1996, starring (oh dear God) Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen, eventually winding its way through an entire catalogue of fantasy titles like Merlin, The Odyssey, Alice in Wonderland, and The 10th Kingdom, and finally coming to a merciful end with 2002’s Dinotopia. During Halmi’s heyday, there wasn’t a magical land of make-believe beyond his reach, as long as cut-rate CGI could support it.

Infinitely more entertaining though than Halmi’s leviathan 10-hour televised elementary school pageants was Halmi himself. A diminutive, 80-something Hungarian immigrant with an obligatory streak of white hair — his unpredictable temper and bitter disdain for the very TV executives who regularly and inexplicably agreed to fund his schlock was the stuff of legend. I’ve never actually seen an interview with Halmi, but knowing his demeanor all-too-well, I always picture his mannerisms being quite a bit like Patton Oswalt’s impression of surly TV painter William Alexander.

I was picking up a paycheck from NBC when Halmi’s initial flame-out began — when his magical fantasy world began to crumble, so to speak, and his banishment from network television seemed all-but-assured.

In 2000, after a series of projects which became known for their consistently escalating budgets and consistently diminishing returns in the way of ratings (as well as one, “The Magical Legend of the Leprechauns,” which became fodder for late-night comedians everywhere thanks to its rather un-PC portrayal of the Irish), NBC wisely reacted with hesitation when presented with Halmi’s latest opus — “The 10th Kingdom.” More than a few cracks had developed in the network’s once mighty primetime juggernaut and the powers that be were weighing their sweeps choices more carefully than usual; Garth Ancier, the programming chief at the time, simply wasn’t sure it was worth the risk involved in tying up five nights of valuable airtime with another of Angry Bob’s whimsical epics.

His Solomon-like solution: Straddle it at the end of the book — with the first episodes inside the sweeps period and the last ones safely outside. As expected, it bombed — leading NBC’s mini-series chief Lindy DeKoven to fall on her sword for signing the thing in the first place.

Halmi’s response to all of this?

He went fucking ballistic.

He screamed to anyone who would listen about NBC’s lack of vision and how no one at the network appreciated “imaginative fantasy” anymore, and he vowed to take his next project elsewhere — leading to the compulsory public statement of remorse from NBC, followed immediately by the private Don’t-Let-the-Door-Hit-You-In-the-Ass-On-the-Way-Out party.

That next project, by the way, was 2002’s incomparably silly “Dinotopia”; the “elsewhere” was ABC.

The ratings were as you might expect.

In the downtime between Halmi’s initial descending spiral at NBC and his attempt at career resurrection at ABC, he managed to piss-off every other network executive in the contiguous 48 — at one point inundating CBS big gun Les Moonves with faxes designed to antagonize the living hell out of him after learning that Moonves had publicly insinuated that Halmi did little more than crank out bad special effects.

But time heals all wounds apparently, and Halmi has allowed himself — and has been allowed — back under the tent of one of the big networks, as Sci-Fi is owned by NBC Universal. Apparently and unfortunately however, one thing that hasn’t changed is his almost preternatural knack for being able to get away with churning out ridiculous garbage — as evidenced by the new “Flash Gordon.”

Like much of what Halmi has done in the past, his latest effort is an embarrassment to the network carrying it, and the presence of it makes it crystal clear just how much Sci-Fi is going to suffer come next May when “Battlestar” wraps-up for good. If this is the kind of brand the network is set on advancing, and NBC is content with accepting, it’s pretty much doomed to a consistent level of failure.

But hey, with Halmi on board, at least Sci-Fi can be assured that it’ll never run out of badly produced dinosaur movies.

Carnotopia anyone?

Chez Pazienza is a television news producer and the voice of Deus Ex Malcontent.


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Comments

Robert Halmi Sr. - soooo... basically the Uwe Boll of television?

Oh, fuck. There's an UWE BOLL OF TELEVISION!

There truly is a God. And He is cruel and merciless.

I just liked the movie for the Queen songs.

Posted by: TK at August 15, 2007 3:21 PM

It must be bad seeing as how 90% of the review focused on the failings of the producer and not the show. I get the picture. I won't be watching.

Posted by: Candy at August 15, 2007 3:22 PM

Darn! I was really looking forward to this one!

Clever title, though.

Posted by: zambonigirl at August 15, 2007 3:33 PM

I'm with TK...the Boll-ization of the Sci-Fi Network is here. I lost all interest in this when I saw the ad's for this with Flash holding a gun that looks like something R2-D2 left floating in the shitter.

Posted by: Manny at August 15, 2007 3:44 PM

Oh god... The Odyssey (starring ARMAND ASSANTE, for Christ's sake). I'd nearly forgotten about that...

Posted by: Gabrielle at August 15, 2007 4:00 PM

Thank you. I thought I would be alone in hating this show. I was afraid that it was something I wasn't getting, since all I knew about Flash Gordon was the 1996 cartoon and the Queen theme song. Was I supposed to want to punch Flash Gordon in the face repeatedly? I am glad to hear that it was just crappy and I don't have to turn in my Pajiba card again.

Oh, my dear sweet Karen Cliche, why? I am sure you could have gotten a spot on another show, why this one?

Posted by: Vermillion at August 15, 2007 4:01 PM

Come on, is it really such a surprise to know that "Battlestar Galactica" is more the exception at the SciFi Channel than the norm? This is a show that wins tons of accolades and has legions of devoted fans, many of them not usually into science fiction, at least on television and yet, because of less than incredible ratings (read: most people watch the show on iTunes, DVR or in ways other than the traditional, "live" viewing that determines ratings numbers) SciFi actually considered not renewing the show for its fourth season.

And in favor of what? Stargate: Atlantis and a re-imagined Flash Gordon that looks as cheap as, apparently, it is.

Thanks, Chez, for taking one for the team, as it were.

Posted by: Armando at August 15, 2007 4:05 PM

I caught this on the USA network a few days ago and thought it was made 10 years ago. I am now shocked to discover that this is a new production.

It reminded me vaguely of Virtuosity - without Russell Crowe and Denzel Washington to distract from the horribleness.

Wait - what was the name of that Josh Charles crapfest? Outerworld? GOD. It was so bad I'm not even bothering to look it up. I do remember Jack Black being in it before anyone knew who he was.

Posted by: hoorah at August 15, 2007 4:06 PM

Oh, but that Queen soundtrack was awesome. Flash! (AA-AAH!) They were just so darn excited about the whole thing.

Posted by: Phaeolus at August 15, 2007 4:07 PM

my little Flash Gordon anecdote: My sister and I grew up on that stupid movie and still have crazy fondness for it. In church, my mom played the piano, so we often sat in the first row. My mom claims that one time the pastor said "flesh" and my sister, quite young at the time, finished the sentence for him with "Aaa-ahh! He'll save every one of us!"
Thankfully she didn't say it too loudly.
I guess it could be used in context, considering Jesus and everything...

Posted by: Rebekah at August 15, 2007 4:34 PM

Oh, man, I loooooooved "The 10th Kingdom" when I was younger...and still have a shameful fondness for it. I can't believe that I left it (and "Merlin" and "Alice In Wonderland") off my list of secret shames. Would I have won?

Posted by: Geetch at August 15, 2007 4:50 PM

Dear Lord, I remember both Gulliver's Travels and Alice in Wonderland.

Terri-fucking-ble.

Posted by: Faye at August 15, 2007 4:59 PM

Five minutes in, I stopped watching and deleted the (now hilariously presumptuous) season pass from my Tivo. This was baaaaaaaaad. I've seen every episode of One Tree Hill, people, and I couldn't watch this show until the first act break.

Posted by: Carrie at August 15, 2007 5:15 PM

Apparently the Queen music almost didn't make it onto the show in the first place - the producers didn't want it -- "too camp" - don't cha know.

Posted by: Meander at August 15, 2007 5:19 PM

Five minutes in, I stopped watching and deleted the (now hilariously presumptuous) season pass from my Tivo.

Exactly what I did.

Posted by: Meander at August 15, 2007 5:29 PM

"Oh, but that Queen soundtrack was awesome. Flash! (AA-AAH!) They were just so darn excited about the whole thing.

Posted by: Phaeolus at August 15, 2007 4:07 PM
"


My favorite thing about the uber-campy 80s film, aside from Bryan Blessed yelling "Dive!" of course, is Max "The Seventh Seal" von Sydow having the time of his life hamming it up for the camera. That's worth any lack of campy goodness, and thankfully the film has lots of campy goodness. Too bad the show doesn't even have that much going for it!

Posted by: Armando at August 15, 2007 5:50 PM

I'll always lust for young Timothy Dalton in those green tights. *sigh!*

Posted by: Mary at August 15, 2007 5:52 PM

I never really cared for Flash Gordon (the cartoon show wasn't really good either), but Queen's song Flash is quite cheesy, in a good way (I was listening to it as I read this article).

Posted by: Radlum at August 15, 2007 6:01 PM

Okay, I've never seen any of the guy's oeuvre and your comment on the bad Irish Leprachaun thingy got me to hating him, but then..."inundating CBS big gun Les Moonves with faxes designed to antagonize the living hell out of him"...I mean who wouldn't forgive a guy who does that? Manys the time I have dreamt up revenge fantasies against Mr. Moonves, sometimes on these very pages. would love to stay and chat, but I'm off to the fax machine post haste to see if I can work off some Moonves-hate.

Posted by: PaddyDog at August 15, 2007 6:54 PM

Armando: If you like campy Max von Sydow in "Flash Gordon" check him out in "Needful Things". The movie isn't bad, but his portrayal of the evil Leland Gaunt is a lot of fun and over the top.

Posted by: Rob at August 15, 2007 6:55 PM

That's the Merlin with Sam Neill, right? I love that miniseries. I may (shut up) own it on DVD.

Posted by: Ashers at August 15, 2007 7:15 PM

Hey. I saw this pilot on Sci Fi this weekend (no, not ALL of it). I could have used a little warning, no?

Thanks Pajiba. That's twenty minutes of my life I will never get back. (like I said, I didn't sit through ALL of it)

Posted by: greer at August 15, 2007 7:54 PM

Holy crap, my brothers and I watched that terrible/awesome movie practically every weekend. Even now we can still be heard yelling "Stop, are you mad?! You're diving into Frigia!!" at each other around the Thanksgiving table. And Timothy Dalton will forever be Prince Barin to me, instead of the worst James Bond.

I... actually liked the Merlin mini-series. Come on, Sam Neil! Helena Bonham Carter! Miranda Richardson playing Queen Mab AND the Lady in the Lake!

Posted by: june at August 15, 2007 8:01 PM

Hmm, I vaguely remember Merlin etc. and loved LOVED the 10th Kingdom (come on, I was probably in junior high) but mostly I kind of want to root for the scrappy Hungarian who made good despite a total lack of any skills at his job.

And now I think I need to watch the Flash movie, all I know of it is the awesome music (and Rebekah, that may be the best Queen/Jesus-related story I've ever heard). I love me some Queen.

Posted by: Anne (in Reno) at August 15, 2007 8:25 PM

This might earn me a paddlin' but .....ah, I really enjoy Merlin...in fact,

IT GETS BETTER EVERY TIME I SEE IT!!!

*cue sound of feet running and car driving away*

Posted by: BarbadoSlim at August 15, 2007 8:53 PM

Wait...in the picture....is that the guy who portrayed Whitney on Smallville? Should I be ashamed of recognizing him?

Posted by: Daphne at August 15, 2007 8:59 PM

I... actually liked the Merlin mini-series. Come on, Sam Neil! Helena Bonham Carter! Miranda Richardson playing Queen Mab AND the Lady in the Lake!

Add me to the List of Shameful Admissions. I liked it for all these reasons AND for Martin Short (how's that for a shameful admission?) in spite of how they fucked with the myth. Whaddaya expect from an American TV network, after all?

I also thought The Odyssey was mad fun...but I'll watch Armand Assante in anything, even a Lifetime Movie or ER.

Those other ones were all crap, though.

Posted by: Jerce at August 15, 2007 9:37 PM

Man I wish Brian Blessed were here so I could yell...

DIVE!!!!

I loved that movie.

Posted by: Smash at August 15, 2007 9:54 PM

"Armando: If you like campy Max von Sydow in "Flash Gordon" check him out in "Needful Things". The movie isn't bad, but his portrayal of the evil Leland Gaunt is a lot of fun and over the top."

Thanks for the tip, Rob. I just might go do that now. I do get a kick out of the fact that Max von Sydow might very well be the only actor to have portrayed both Jesus and the Devil on film in his career.

Posted by: Armando at August 15, 2007 10:13 PM

I only watched the 10th Kingdom at first for Kimberly Williams (I have a soft spot for Father of the Bride) but then I noticed that the wolf guy was pretty hot. In the end, I learned that he had knocked up KW's character, saying she had a "wolf cub growing inside of her." Wow. Bestiality on NBC. Gotta love that.

Posted by: Brie at August 15, 2007 11:58 PM

Yeah...I liked Merlin too. Sorry! I just love Miranda Richardson.

I actually saw Flash again, for the first time since I was little, with my dad and my fiance (who had never seen it before) a few weeks ago. The soundtrack is AWESOME. And Flash is such a himbo.

Posted by: Ali at August 16, 2007 12:57 AM

Halmi was also one of the producers of FarScape and the mini-series, The Lost Empire (A very decent westernization of Journey to the West).

Posted by: Adam C at August 16, 2007 2:46 AM

Flash crashed. Big.

My roommate and I actually sat through the entirety of Dinotopia one Saturday afternoon. We were flipping through channels and saw Wentworth Miller riding on top of a talking dinosaur. Not knowing how else we were supposed to react to that, we spent the next six hours gaping at the tv trying to figure out if what we were watching was mildly bad or incredibly awesome. Considering the next time SciFi showed it we watched the first 20 minutes we had managed to miss the first time around, we compromised on mildly awesome.

Posted by: McGeek at August 16, 2007 4:24 AM

I actually watched this on television when this premiered because my mother and I couldn't agree on anything else to watch in the hotel room.

I guessed where the Imex was as soon as we saw the watch.

But I agree, complete crap.

Posted by: the maljax at August 16, 2007 8:06 AM

In regards to Flash Gordan - yes i've been reading on other forums and websites that it's crap, but i'll still watch it! It can't be that bad!!!!

BTW i love the 80's film!

I rememember seeing Dinotopia years ago - Wentworth Miller is gorgeous...

Posted by: Neena at August 16, 2007 8:49 AM

Network execs love to stick to the devil they know.

Posted by: Jenn Lewis at August 16, 2007 9:05 AM

the wonderful 1980 version is available on dvd now!!!!!!

Posted by: courtney at August 16, 2007 11:25 AM

we compromised on mildly awesome.

I am making it my goal in life to write projects that will be remembered as mildly awesome.

Posted by: twig at August 16, 2007 11:33 AM

Perhaps it was because of how old I was at the time, but I also have a fondness for the Merlin miniseries, and own the DVD. Part of my love was all the good will I had because Sam Neill was in Jurassic Park. It goes both ways though, I didn't watch CSI for like 3 years because Grissom was in The Skulls.
Anyone remember the wonderfully awful Flesh Gordon? No? I'll go back to my hole

Posted by: C Orser at August 16, 2007 11:54 AM

I am emerging from lurkage just to make this post.

I'm ill and bored at the moment and also a huge fan of the Arthurian legends, so when I saw that there exists a Merlin mini-series, my curiosity was piqued and I immediately procured it (by legal means, obviously *ahem*).

It's fucking dire. (Spoilers follow)

I've given up now after one hour due to my poor brain being battered by plot developments that come literally out of nowhere, terrible pacing, rubbish CG, the huge liberties taken with the material and mostly the fact that the reason for people siding with Mordred makes absolutely no freakin' sense. (How can Arthur's mercy for Guenevere represent a double standard when she was being tried for a crime only she could commit? Are we meant to believe that he regularly goes out executing peasants for cheating on him? The mind boggles.)

I did, however, love the scene where Arthur tells his men to rise their hearts and their banners, and all the extras dutifully raise their hands ready (I presume) for impressive CG banners to be added later and... nothing. No banners at all. So at least it was worth one laugh.

I'm never watching another film again on the reccommendation of people who freely admit to being ashamed of liking it. Serves me right, I guess.

/relurk

Posted by: C at August 16, 2007 6:20 PM

Watched the pilot myself.. Couldn't agree more. It felt to me like somebody wanted to do yet another 'stargate'-ey type show. At this point Sci-Fi to me is only a vehicle for my Dr. Who fix (and hopefully Torchwood before I go insane)

Posted by: Ray at August 16, 2007 10:46 PM

Watched about seven minutes of this a couple nights ago. And then I wanted to hit the director with my television, then set his unconscious form on fire.

Posted by: TK at August 17, 2007 9:30 AM

So...you admit that you missed the opening credits. And you failed to mention anything having to do with the program in question. I have to ask: did you actually watch the thing? Or did you decide to wing a review based on your hazy memories of the Flash Gordon movie and a Halmi-bashing screed?

I come to Pajiba for the bitchiness. Is it too much to ask that the reviewers, you know, review what they're bitching about?

Posted by: ironchefoklahoma at August 17, 2007 1:12 PM

ironchefOK - He's not a reviewer. He wrote the post on his blog originally, and Pajiba decided it would be fun to post it.

Settle down.

Posted by: TK at August 17, 2007 2:35 PM

I found this because I also downloaded the free episode. I admit I download anything that iTunes gives away for free despite having recorded and watched the show last Saturday (the day after it originally aired). What I found when I went back ti iTunes to post a review is that they aren't offering the show anymore. I used the link from my emailed receipt to write a review but who knows if it will ever be seen.

Posted by: D at August 17, 2007 11:34 PM

Don't forget that Halmi was also responsible for the execrable Earthsea miniseries, another turkey starring people who were in Smallville.

Flash Gordon is right in keeping with the SciFi tradition of clueless crap.

Posted by: David Alexander McDonald at August 18, 2007 12:36 PM

To Halmi's credit, he did do the 2 night miniseries Arabian Nights for ABC back in 2000, which was absolutely fantastic.

I'll be skipping this Flash Gordon, however. I don't want to get any on me.

Posted by: Yin at August 20, 2007 12:35 PM