@lauren I was a teenager, raised on SF&F and when I first saw the Ralph McQuarrie concept art I damn near passed out. SF had almost never been done well visually in film, certainly not far-flung silver age SF as distinct from near-future gems like "2001".
But as the film approached and I learned more about it (I even had a first edition of the novelization, ghostwritten by Alan Dean Foster BTW), I realized it wasn't SF, it was a rather childish fantasy movie in SF drag. I did like the first one for what it was, but found them increasingly out-bumming. Still haven't ever seen the third film in either of the latter-made trilogies.
@lauren Y'know, his "Flash" would probably have been pretty good, if we're to take Raiders as an example of how he treated 1930s pulp serial material.
@pieist Yep.
@lauren (Aside: as appalled as I was at the time by the Rolller-Disco Camp of the 1980-ish Buck Rogers series, I recently realized i'm weirdly nostalgic for it now. )
@pieist C'mon "Flash" (oooh oooh!) is a fun film.
@lauren Brian Blessed steals it
@lauren (I can't help but imagine there was something prankish about it: "I know, let's put tiny angel wings on Brian Blessed! It'll be a howl." But he carries it off, because he's Brian Blessed and nothing can change that.)
@pieist Well, it was groundbreaking for what it was, keeping in mind that it was apparently George's second choice when he couldn't get the rights to do Flash Gordon.