The
first episode of Hanna Barbera’s Space Stars (1981) tells multiple
stories of space heroics.
The
episode opens with a Space Ghost adventure called “Microworld.”
Here, Space Ghost must rescue Jann and Jace from
planet Cetia 3, which the Toymaker has miniaturized and brought aboard his
spaceship.
A
tale clearly in the mode of a Batman story -- with Space Ghost as the caped
crusader and Jan and Jace as Robin stand-ins -- “Microworld” is so science-free
as so as to be absurd.
A
spaceship’s hull, for instance, is peeled back like a sardine can, at one
point, and there is no worry about explosive decompression.
Later
an inhabited planet grows back to full size after being held on a spaceship.
How was it kept warm without a star to
nurture it? Is it returned to the correct orbit?
I understand that this is a children’s show,
but these stories are more accurately fantasy than science fiction. The universe of Space Stars does not seem
governed by any physical laws we would recognize.
The
Teen Force story this week is called “Nebulon.” After traveling through Black
Hole X, the teen teeam investigates a monster, Nebulon, apparently attacking Uglor’s
home planet. Made entirely from “electrical
energy,” Nebulon looks like a big white ghost. He has actually been created by
Uglor, and used as a ruse to trap the Teen Force.
Again,
science is not the friend of the Space Stars. The heroes ride around, their
skin exposed to space, on their space cycles. These cycles have no sealed
cockpits, and the heroes don’t wear protective suits. I admit I find this incredibly
distracting. Even “non” super-beings,
like Jan and Jace seem to travel through space unprotected, and yet able to
breathe.
My
favorite segment of Space Stars -- The Herculoids -- star in “The Firebird” this
week. As dawn breaks on Quasar, a terrible force is unleashed by a
volcano. A great firebird emerges from
it.
If memory serves, I think this was actually a plot
from an episode of Hanna Barbera’s Godzilla (1978), but no matter. The
Herculoids eventually learn that the Firebird was merely protecting its baby
egg. The family learns “an important
lesson” from this encounter; that “no
animal is wholly evil.”
Because
this story is set on an alien world, and not in space, it gets a lot more
suspension of disbelief, and at least it possesses a thematic point. The human component of
the Herculoids team must deal with alien life forms of all shapes and sizes,
so it would make sense that they understand that some animals are “dangerous” because
they want to survive, not because they are malicious.
The
second Space Ghost story in this hour is “Planet of the Space Monkeys.” While Uglar enters the Milky Way galaxy
causing trouble, Blip runs away from home and visit a planet of space
monkeys. This story features the series’
first cross-over as Elektra helps Space Ghost take care of Uglar, who is “playing
in our galaxy” for a change.
In
“Will the Real Mr. Galaxy Please Stand Up,” an Astro and the Space Mutts
installment, Space Ace traces a robbery at First Galaxy Bank back to Muscle
Beach Moon. There, Space Ace must enter a beauty contest. The less said about this one, the
better.
And
the finale this week -- “Polaris” -- sees Space Ghost needing the help of the Teen
Force once more, when he plunges through a space warp.
Yeah the Firebird was a mommy i guess its egg wasnt in the lava where it could hatch Iggo the rock ape crried it into the lva where it did hatch and a cute little baby firebird is born and with his mommy
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