15 July 2022

Flash Gordon Inspiration: The Comic Strips 1940-1942 (Dailies)

My copy of Flash Gordon: Radium Mines of Electra (Dailies 1940-1942). The cover depicts Flash and Dale.

Flash Gordon: Radium Mines of Electra (Dailies 1940-1942) is the first volume in the collected Flash Gordon daily comic strips by Austin Briggs and Don Moore. The artwork by Briggs is strong, but the stories by Moore are not, and at times they border on self-parody. At one point Flash suffers a blow to the head, after which he becomes cold and cruel, only occasionally remembering his affection for Dale. Eventually, he snaps out of it after receiving another blow to the head, and he resumes a semblance of normalcy, but his encounter with the tempestuous Tigra, Queen of Forestia, results in a radical personality change for him. No longer an upholder of loyalty and chivalry, he transforms into the sort of stereotypical womanizer he would ordinarily chastise or fight. Perhaps the second volume of dailies will reveal that he is under the influence of another drug, spell, or hypnotic ray of Mongo and he will return to his senses, or that this is not the real Flash Gordon at all. Short of such a revelation, I fear that Moore himself might have been under the influence of something, and the dailies will be shown to have "jumped the flying shark" as it were.

Overall, I'm disappointed and a bit saddened by the comic strips in this volume. Flash Gordon's greatest appeal for me is his character: his courage, his ideals, his capacity for forgiveness, his open-mindedness, his ability to find and encourage the goodness in others, and his willingness to sacrifice himself to save others. To replace that with stock machismo and misogyny is a betrayal of the spirit of the Alex Raymond era of Flash Gordon. I will be relieved if he returns to normal in future installments, but I can't help feeling that it is a cheap and unimaginative plot device. If it isn't a plot device, but rather an intentional alteration of his character, then I regard it as a serious misstep (that was thankfully disregarded in the better adaptations). I await the next volume with trepidation.

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