Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars

March. 21,1938      NR
Rating:
6.9
Trailer Synopsis Cast

When a deadly Nitron ray strikes Earth, Flash Gordon and his friends travel to Mars to battle Ming the Merciless and his new ally Queen Azura.

Buster Crabbe as  Flash Gordon
Jean Rogers as  Dale Arden
Frank Shannon as  Dr. Zarkov
Charles Middleton as  Emperor Ming
Beatrice Roberts as  Queen Azura
Richard Alexander as  Prince Barin
C. Montague Shaw as  Clay King
Wheeler Oakman as  Tarnak
Kane Richmond as  Stratosled Pilot (Talgon's Brother)
Warner Richmond as  Zandar

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Reviews

Mjeteconer
1938/03/21

Just perfect...

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ShangLuda
1938/03/22

Admirable film.

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Sexyloutak
1938/03/23

Absolutely the worst movie.

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BelSports
1938/03/24

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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johnrtracy
1938/03/25

This is the sequel to the 1936 Flash Gordon serial. Flash and company go from the planet Mongo to the planet Mars. The same cast return with the addition of Frank Shannon as comic relief. Beatrice Roberts plays Queen Azura, "Queen Of Magic". I personally missed seeing Priscilla Lawson as Princess Aura. Charles Middleton is and always will be "Ming The Merciless" This serial is also Jean Rogers last portrayal of Dale Arden. This is a fun serial to watch. 15 thrilling episodes with clay people, forest people, Flash, Dale, Dr. Zarkof and, i do so love her, Beatrice Roberts. Well, girls and boys, buckle up have you're popcorn at the ready and enjoy. John R. Tracy.

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John T. Ryan
1938/03/26

The overwhelming success of the 1936 Flash Gordon Serial demanded that a sequel be made. With out any change in the main cast of characters, the New Universal plunged head first int the second film, retaining Buster Crabbe,Jean Rogers,Charles Middleton and Richard Alexander from the cast of the original.What they came up with was FLASH GORDON's TRIP TO MARS (1938). In many ways, this may have been the overall best of the Trilogy. We open up with "the Stratosphere Party" returning to Planet Earth, and landing in some farmer's vegetable patch. Ironically in the conversation leading up to re-entry, Flash states that the'll be okay as long as wherever they land, it should be "anywhere but the ocean!", which is directly opposite to what NASA projects have always desired.Well, they no sooner get back and Dr. 'Alexis' Zarkov* addresses the scientific community, then a mysterious beam of a light ray coming to earth from space sends them off to Mongo again. A now brunette** Dale quips, "I'm getting to feel like a regular commuter!" Obsevation from space leads Zarkov to discover that the culprit planet is Mars, not Mongo. After course correction, and being shot down by martian ray, they are off to a great number of encounters with several different races of Martians. The Clay People, the Forest People and those reg'lar Martians at the Court of the Great Azura (Beatrice Roberts),Queen of Magic all seem to have it in for the 4 of them.Yes, 4 (four) people were now in the party, as they were joined by one 'Happy' Hapgood, star reporter of The Dispatch,who had stowed away. Hapgood (played by Donald Kerr) is there to provide a comic relief,the one element that the first serial lacked.Well needless to say after all is said and done, Flash and company are victorious in winning the any for Earth and destroying the Nitron Lamp that was causing the problem.This film had a much brighter look to it, overall. I mean the actual daylight, not the mood. There was plenty of peril and the action was superbly maintained through out.Great special effects,with the Clay Peoples' transformation scenes being at the top of the list! So, where is my criticism? It may seem trivial to say, but once again, alas, Hollywood took some really unnecessary liberties with the story. Basing their screenplay on the continuity in the Sunday Newspaper Comic Strip by Mr. Alex Raymond, it was truly a subject matter that was already familiar to most of the movie going audience. This adventure in the original comic strip form, was entitled THE WITCH QUEEN of MONGO. That's right the whole adventure was set on the fictional Mongo, not Mars.One can only speculate as to the why of this change, so I will.Mars has long been hot copy in the sci-fi world. People like Edgar Rice Burroughs, H.P.Lovecraft and H.G. Wells have used its mysterious, cloudy reddish appearance as a springboard to exciting, fantastic adventures in the still unknown space. Mars was still a good venue to have such a story to take place-even in the late 1930's.But perhaps it was Welles, Orson not H.G. who caused the moving decision. Remember this was the year of the famous and infamous War of the Worlds Radio Broadcast. It was done by Mr. Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre of the Air, broadcast right around Halloween. One could reason that this was an attempt by Universal to cash in on the Mars Craze. But, that could only be true if it was released very late that year. However, there was a Feature version of this F.G. adventure, entitled MARS ATTACKS, that was definitely marketed in this manner.One should mention a few other elements, lest we sound too critical. FLASH GORDON's TRIP to MARS had an opening to each chapter showing a uniformed Martian viewing a telescreen, which capsulized the previous chapters' action, leading up to this weeks 'cliff hanger'. The images on the screen are like the illustrations from the comic strip, with summarizing written text. They are still, not animated. This same gimmick was used in at least 2 other of Universal's comic strip adaptations, JUNGLE JIM (also by Alex Raymond) and for RADIO PATROL. It was a very effective and interesting way of story telling.The film was loaded with a lot of pseudo scientific gadgetry. The great Nitron Lamp, the Martian aircraft (dubbed 'Strato-sleds'), a Jet Rail Car (through a tunnel of poison gas, no less) and a Paralyzer Ray Gun (another gadget cooked up by Zarkov). My favourite gimmick was the Light Bridge.A beam of light becomes to a solid state,allowing pedestrian crossing on it. (Whata ya wanna bet there were kids all over the country mimicking the Light Bridge at the painted lines in the crossings. I know, we did.The music in any Flash Gordon always should get a mention. This was certainly no different, what with a previously used opening theme, name unknown to me. The sound track features incidental music culled from previous Universal features such as THE INVISIBLE MAN, THE WEREWOLF OF London and BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN, all expertly woven into what we all knew as 'Flash Gordon Music.' NOTE * Zarkov's given name was Hans. Was there already some anti German sentiment in Hollywood? It was 1938, World War II was on the horizon and the 1st World War hardly forgotten.NOTE** Dale was always a Brunette in the Newspaper Strip.There has been some speculation that she was made Blonde in the earlier adventure because of Jean Harlow's popularity on the screen.

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M_I_S_
1938/03/27

First saw this serial as a child.....remembered it when I saw it as an adult......even remembered the music......how about that!

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Drifter-7
1938/03/28

The Clay People! Who can forget that sequence in Chapter 2 when they first appear. And all to that great Waxman music. Still a good serial to watch, even in these days. Good photography, OK acting, polished script but somehow the original 1936 serial was superior. And kudos again to that great tracked musical score.

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