In
“Return of the Sorcerer,” the super-villain Sorcerer (Michael Constantine) and
his side-kick Miss Dazzle (Susan Lanier) steal Merlin’s Magic Mirror from an
exhibit in the Municipal Records Building.
Crime
Scope detects a “space-time disturbance
of unknown origin,” and before long the Sorcerer has also stolen a
priceless clock from Lori (Deidre Hall) and Judy (Judy Strangis).
The
villains contact Electra-Base and tell ElectraWoman and DynaGirl of their next
target: The Crown Jewels of England.
When
the heroes intervene, the Sorcerer traps the duo in another dimension inside
Merlin’s Mirror.
ElectraWoman
and DynaGirl attempt to escape this bizarre nether realm, but only manage to
follow their nemesis through time, where the Sorcerer plans to steal the Mona
Lisa from Leonardo Da Vinci.
“Return
of the Sorcerer” is a particularly strange episode of this Sid and Marty Krofft
Saturday morning series. The Sorcerer traps the heroes in an alternate
dimension, and travels through time.
Then, Crime Scope and Frank (Norman Alden) “rip a hole” in space time to
retrieve the heroes. It’s kind of crazy,
though inventive. Suddenly, these
villains and heroes have the capacity to affect all of creation, all of time
and space.
Not
every aspect of “Return of the Sorcerer” works well.
For
example, the alternate dimension looks more like a relatively cramped
sound-stage, with the mirror exit to “reality” plainly visible in certain
shots.
And
one scene just doesn’t make any sense at all.
ElectraWoman and DynaGirl are menaced by giant “clapping hands,” (really
an illusion projected by the Sorcerer).
But they are deafened instantly by the sound of the clapping. Frank tells the heroes they won’t be deafened
if they don’t believe the illusion. But
ElectraWoman and DynaGirl reacted instantly to the sound, before the illusion
of the hands’ presence was even seen.
Why would an illusion make them recoil in pain? They had no chance to believe or not, their
ears ‘heard’ the clapping.
The
Sorcerer, meanwhile, continues to come up with alliterative names for the
heroes in a turn that seems right out of the original Batman (1966 – 1968). He calls ElectraWoman and Dynagirl “Kilowatt
Cuties,” the “Clumsy, Computerized Combo” and “Diode Dollies.”
This
episode marks the second and final appearance of Constantine’s the Sorcerer and
Lanier’s Miss Dazzle. It also features
an appearance by a cult-TV staple, Leonardo DaVinci, who has also appeared on Star
Trek: Voyager (1995 – 2001). His
famous painting, the Mona Lisa, appeared in Doctor Who’s 1978 serial,
“City of Death.”
Next
week: “The Pharaoh.”
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