The
eleventh and final hour-long episode of Hanna Barbera’s Space Stars (1981) opens
with the Space Ghost story “Web of the Wizard.”
Here,
the Phantom Cruiser is trapped in a cosmic web of illusion. Space Ghost and his friends encounter wacky
delusions like killer chairs and dogs in space. Behind these illusions,
however, is the Wizard, an evil space criminal. Blip saves the day because he
is not impacted by the illusions.
The
Teen Force episode in this last episode is called “Pandora’s Warp” and it
involves a space station attacked by weird visitors from another dimension.
These visitors resemble devils and demons, and are secretly controlled by
Uglor, who has punched a hole into “the
dimension of magic.” The Teen Force uses magic spells to repel the space invaders.
In
“Mindbender,” the Herculoids encounter a weird alien in a suspended animation
cylinder. Using a pendant which restores the evil telepath’s power, this
interloper sets to awaken his brothers from suspended animation too.
The
Herculoids (improbably) trap the villain in his own stasis chamber. It’s ridiculous how they do it. They tell him his missing pendant is in his
cylinder, and the dome-headed, ostensibly brilliant alien invader willingly
crawls inside to retrieve it. Then the Herculoids slam the door on him and submit him to another eternal deep freeze.
The
second Space Ghost episode of the week is “The Shadow People.” In this one,
Blip is possessed by an evil shadow bat on Romula Station, an abandoned space
facility. There, the people have legends of Shadows, demons from another sector
of space. Electra of the Teen Force helps Space Ghost rescue Blip and puzzle
out the mystery.
The
final “Space Ace” segment of the series is “Revenge of the Zodiac Man.” In the
Stardust Constellation Ring, the most valuable gem in the universe is stolen by
a criminal named Zodiac Man. Space Ace and his dog partners chase the villain
to a galactic amusement park called “Play Station,” and then to the villain’s
HQ on a “Zodia-steroid” to retrieve it.
The
Space Stars Finale, “The Cosmic Mousetrap” finds the Teen Force and Space Ghost
battling Mega Mind, a villain who tests the heroes in combat to the death with
three creepy aliens. This episode is a
veritable knock-off of the Space: 1999 (1975-1977) episode “The
Rules of Luton.”
The
Space Magic of this final Space Stars episode involves another
lame card trick. The Space Fact finds Space Ace and Astro grappling with a
black hole, and the Space Mystery similarly involves a black hole.
Having
now watched all agonizing, eleven hours of Space Stars, I can report that it is
mindless juvenilia that any self-respecting fan of science fiction -- or
superheroes, for that matter -- would find a terrible embarrassment to watch.
The attempt to ape the success (and formula)
of The Super Friends fails utterly, and none of the long-lived Hanna Barbera
properties featured prominently -- Space Ghost or The Herculoids -- are
well-served by the simplistic storytelling and the even more simplistic
understanding of the cosmos.
An absolute low point for Hanna Barbera, and that is saying something.
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