In
Hanna Barbera’s Space Stars (1981) episode two, the hour begins with a Space
Ghost story called “The Starfly.”
While
Space Ghost s combating a star beast who has attacked transport ships Ulysses
and Cosmos, Blip encounters a friendly alien star fly on Ghost Planet. The
creature is suffering from a “radiation
overdose.”
The
star fly spins a cocoon and becomes a star beast too, but the monster remembers
his friendship with Blip, and remains friendly. Space Ghost is impressed
because “no one has ever tamed a star beast before.”
This
episode is better than the previous Space Ghost installments since it at least
seems to have a point. A kindness given
is not forgotten, even when one “grows up.”
The
Teen Force episode “Death Ray,” meanwhile, explores Uglar’s latest attempt to
destroy Black Hole X and forever lock his enemies out of our universe.
The
second Space Ghost affair, “The Anti-Matter Man” involves a scientist, Dr.
Conta, who is transformed into a Mr. Hyde-type anti-matter monster, and must be
restored to normal.
Last
week’s Herculoids story was about fire, this week it’s about ice. In “The Ice
Monster,” a melting iceberg has a deadly secret inside a giant armored robot.
This goliath attacks the Herculoids’ camp.
In
Astro and the Space Mutts this week, the story is called “Reverso” and it involves
a master computer stolen by a villain named Reverso, who can “reverserize”
things.
The
finale cross over, “Dimension of Doom” sees the return of Uglar. He uses a
special weapon to transform Jan, Jace and even Space Ghost into hairy space
mutants. The Teen Force arrives to help,
even as Space Ghost fights to control his transformations.
One of the omnibus “black outs” this week, “Space Mystery” involves Space Ace,
Cosmo and Digger’s trip fishing when they attempt to resolve the mystery of sea
monster whose foot prints have disappeared.
The answer involves high tide,
which washed away evidence of the monster’s presence.
This
hour, like the first, is extremely juvenile in story-telling and science
fiction. There’s lots of laser beams movement and monsters, but very little in
terms of intriguing concepts.
No comments:
Post a Comment