In
“Valley of the Man-Apes,” Thundarr, Ariel and Ookla ride through Death Canyon
when they spy intelligent ape creatures digging in the desert there.
Led
by the malevolent, human-hating ape creature called Simius, the apes unearth a
giant robotic ape paw. It is the hand of
a mythological figure called “The Mighty
One.”
Worse,
Simius and his minions are hell-bent on re-assembling the giant ape, and seek
out the robot’s missing animatronic limbs.
Thundarr
and his friends clash with Simius at an abandoned movie studio, but it is too
late to stop him from completing his task. Simius puts together the Mighty One,
a giant ape and movie prop from before the holocaust. Worse, he still functions, and becomes a
terrifying weapon.
Now
Thundarr and his friends must defeat the giant mecha-ape using an abandoned
World War II airplane, one flown (by Ariel) with magic.
“Valley
of the Man-Apes” is another really entertaining winner for Thundarr the Barbarian (1980 – 1982).
The
episode qualifies essentially, as a pastiche of Planet of the Apes (1968)
and King
Kong (1977). To wit: intelligent
apes attempt to make war against humanoid (or elf-in) villagers using a giant
robotic ape.
But the ape is defeated in a battle with a pre-holocaust plane, and that fate is
reminiscent of King Kong’s death in his famous cinematic outings.
Even
more delightfully, “Valley of the Man-Apes” stages much of is action at an
ancient movie studio, and specifically a western ghost town there. One battle sequence hauls out -- purposefully
– every Western movie “saloon” cliché imaginable in about a minute long span. Thundarr swings from a chandelier, there is
fight over and across the central saloon bar, and even a piano in the corner
comes into play..
There’s
also some wicked, under-the-surface humor here.
Simius and his monkey friends are attempting to re-assemble,
essentially, a giant prop of King Kong, one operated by robotics.
In
real life, Dino De Laurentiis never quite got his Kong robot to work on the set
of the 1976 King Kong, but that robot (and his behind-the-scenes story…) is
nonetheless the clear inspiration for this narrative. “Valley of the Man Apes” thus functions both as action-packed
adventure, and subtle satire of Hollywood, from its depiction of the cowboy
milieu to Tinsel Town’s over-spending on special effects gimmicks that have no
chance of working as intended.
Filled
with clever allusions to Planet of the Apes, King Kong and
Hollywood history in general, “Valley of the Man-Apes” is one of the best and
smartest Thundarr episodes, one that stands alongside such efforts as
“Stalker from the Stars” and “Island of the Body Snatchers.”
Next
week: Trial by Terror.”
Thank you again for continuing this very enjoyable weekly series on "Thundarr." This was one of my favorite episodes as a kid as well. To my friends and I, "Valley of the Man-Apes" seemed to be the least frequently aired episode of the show. Several of my friends never saw it, only adding to its allure.
ReplyDeleteJohn another thoughtful review of THUNDARR. The King Kong robot in made me think that this was Universal Studios Hollywood and the King Kong from the Tram ride escaped. It was inside a sound stage and the Tram with people would be attacked.
ReplyDeleteSGB