Annal:1981 Hugo Award for Dramatic Presentation, Long Form

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Results of the Hugo Award in the year 1981. For a ranked list of films, try an honor roll:

Flash Gordon

Mike Hodges

When the totalitarian planet of Mongo decides on a whim to obliterate Earth, it’s up to the lunk-headed quarterback Flash Gordon and his oddball companions to make the universe safe for democracy. Based on the classic (and infinitely more reputable) comic strip and its ‘30s screen serialization, this cotton-candy-colored trash classic deserves immortality for Queen’s unforgettably pulsating soundtrack alone. The legendary Max von Sydow appears to be having a blast as the evil Ming the Merciless, while Ornella Muti, as his daughter, is the living embodiment of…

 

Cosmos: Television series hosted by Carl Sagan

Adrian Malone

When Cosmos was first broadcast in 1980, our world—and the context of Carl Sagan’s eloquent “personal journey”—was a different place. The late Dr. Sagan would be pleased to witness the cooling of the cold war, the continued exploration of space, and ongoing efforts to curb our destructive dependence on fossil fuels. For Sagan’s series is far more than a guided tour through “billions and billions” of stars and galaxies. It remains a profound plea for the unity of humankind, for the recognition that “we are a way for the universe to know itself,” with an…

 

The Lathe of Heaven

David R. Loxton, Fred Barzyk

“Antwerp!” For science fiction fans, the long-awaited VHS and DVD release of The Lathe of Heaven is a dream come true. This haunting adaptation of Ursula K. Le Guin’s genre-classic novel was broadcast but once on PBS in 1980 before rights and other legal snafus relegated it to the archives. Reportedly PBS’s most requested program, the made-for-TV film was at last rebroadcast in 2000. Set in Portland, Oregon, in the near future, The Lathe of Heaven stars Bruce Davison as George Orr, who, to put it mildly, has a dream problem. Not only do his dreams…

 

The Martian Chronicles

Michael Anderson

With each passing year, this 1980 miniseries becomes more for those who have read Ray Bradbury’s landmark novel. The three-part, nearly five-hour series keeps its brainy science fiction roots; this story (and the 1940s novel) is not about laser battles and exciting action pieces. Bradbury’s novel is galvanized by the cold war nightmare: at the end of the 20th century, an earth teetering on world war begins to colonize Mars without much knowledge of the new world. Hard science is left for other stories, and director Michael Anderson (Logan’s Run) keeps this…

 
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