Lords of Light! Thundarr the Barbarian Gets Blu-ray Release!
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In 1980, kids were being prepared for the apocalypse -- which was actually going to be pretty cool and happen in 1994, when a rogue planet would pass between the Earth and the moon, splitting Luna into pieces and leaving devastation in its wake. All we had to do was wait 2000 years for mankind to rise up from the ashes into a world filled with savage creatures, sorcery, and super-science!
This was the world of Thundarr the Barbarian, a Saturday morning cartoon that took everything that was cool in 1980 -- Star Wars, Dungeons & Dragons, and Planet of the Apes -- and mashed it all into one big crazy ball of action and adventure. Starring Robert Ridgely (formerly Flash Gordon and later General Thunderbolt Ross) as Thundarr, the titular barbarian who would leap without looking into battle with his magical Sunsword, viewers were treated to weekly battles with evil wizards who used combination of magic with "old world" technology like missiles and satellite computers in order to subjugate the downtrodden.
Joining Thundarr in his crusade were the sorceress Princess Ariel (Nellie Bellflower), who doubled as an expert in "Old Earth" history to the point where I often wondered and the growling but loveable brute, Ookla the Mok (voiced by the gravelly Henry Corden, best known for accepting the Fred Flinstone torch from Alan Reed). Together, they would travel to a different -- and familiar -- location every episode to protect the innocent.
The action wasn't limited to just this "Great Disaster" setting (an expression borrowed from Kamandi comics on purpose, as designer Alex Toth shared some of the duties on this Ruby-Spears production with the legendary Jack Kirby). At least once, they fended off an invasion from outer space, and twice the adventures took them through time into the past -- our present -- the second time setting up what could have been -- and perhaps was planned as -- a spinoff series. (Since the world shattering events were cosmic in nature, there was little chance of using this time-travel trope to try to change the future, so that concept wasn't even visited.)
The stories were engaging, and the artwork and animation superior even then to much of what is being produced for broadcast today. The pop-culture references are part of what makes the series fun, as we see a tribe of sentient apes ("Valley of the Man-Apes") try to rebuild their god in Hollywood from the discarded animatronic pieces of what would be King Kong. The final episode, "Trial by Terror," shows an obvious influence by The Dukes of Hazzard, which was also incredibly popular at the time.
This release sees the entire series collected onto Blu-ray, and includes a bonus feature that looks back at the creation of the series.
Frequently, these collections of television nostalgia pale upon revisitation. Thundarr the Barbarian is one of the few that pleasantly holds up through the years. This one definitely gets a recommend out of us.
Disc One | Disc Two | Disc Three |
01. Secret of the Black Pearl 02. Harvest of Doom 03. Mindok the Mind Menace 04. Raiders of the Abyss 05. Treasure of the Moks 06. Attack of the Amazon Women 07. The Brotherhood of Night 08.Challenge of the Wizards
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09. Valley of the Man-Apes 10. Stalker from the Stars 11. Portal into Time 12. Battle of the Barbarians 13. Den of the Sleeping Demon 14. Wizard Wars 15. Fortress of Fear 16. Island of the Body Snatchers |
17. City of Evil 18. Last Train to Doomsday 19. Master of the Stolen Sunsword 20. Prophecy of Peril 21. Trial by Terror Special Feature: Lords of Light: The Story of Thundarr the Barbarian |