Buck Rogers Complete Series Download Torrent

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By/Dec. 23, 2020 11:18 am EDT/Updated: May 3, 2021 4:02 pm EDT

On this week's Closer Look we take a look at the Blu-ray release of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, and take an encore HD look at the Complete Epic Series L. Buck Rogers Series. Topics Buck Rogers. Buck Rogers Addeddate 2020-02-28 01:22:01 Identifier BuckRogersSeries Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4 Source. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Vol. 5: 1935-1936 by Philip Francis Nowlan 3.62 8 Ratings 1 Reviews published 2011 1 edition. The year is 1987 and NASA launches the last of America's deep space probes. Aboard this compact starship a lone astronaut Captain William Buck Rogers, was to experience cosmic forces beyond all comprehension. In a freak mishap Ranger 3 and its pilot are blown out of their trajectory into an orbit which freezes his life support system and returns Buck Rogers to Earth 500 years later. Buck Rogers In The 25th Century: The Complete Collection is currently available to purchase on Blu-Ray. Note: Images presented in this review are not reflective of the image quality of the Blu-Ray. Disclaimer: Kino Classics has supplied a copy of this set free of charge for review purposes.

One would imagine that Brian K. Vaughan, the award-winning writer of such productions as Y: The Last Man and Lost, has his pick of cool science fiction properties to adapt. So why did he sign on to write Legendary Television's Buck Rogers series, centered around a character almost a century old? Why did Don Murphy and Susan Montford, whose credits include Transformers and Real Steel, jump to dust off a property that most people under the age of 50 don't even know about? What, exactly, is the appeal of this fictional spaceman from 1928?

The short answer to these questions is that Buck Rogers is awesome. Fantasy and sci-fi fandom currently dominates the mainstream, and no fan's knowledge of the genre can be complete without an acknowledgement of Buck Rogers as the granddaddy of all popular space heroes. From his earliest imitator, Flash Gordon, to his later successors like Captain Kirk, Han Solo, Buzz Lightyear, and beyond, he's a major origin point. Beyond his legacy, Buck Rogers is also simply cool, even today. This is his untold story, from his must-have toys to his fascinating future.

From pulp fiction to the mainstream

In the early 1900s — before the internet, movies, TV, and even most radio — genre-loving folks got their science fiction and fantasy fixes from pulp magazines like Amazing Stories and Air Wonder Stories. Those super-old-school fans were geeking out over the two-fisted heroics of Tarzan and John Carter of Mars, who took their readers to the far-off fantasylands of the lawless jungle, the wilds of outer space, and even further beyond.

Buck Rogers, originally named Anthony Rogers, first appeared in a 1928 issue of Amazing Stories as the star of Armageddon 2419A.D., a novella by Philip Francis Nowlan. The following year, Nowlan was hired to expand the story into a comic strip serial entitled Buck Rogers by the John F. Dille Company, a syndication service providing comic strips and other content to local newspapers. With that nationwide exposure, Buck Rogers fever swept popular culture, introducing science fiction to a mainstream audience in a whole new way, and creating an important progenitor for the modern superhero.

An early superhero in an early dystopia

The original Buck Rogers series follows a man named William Rogers, who is a World War I veteran working as a mine inspector. A combination of a cave-in and exposure to weird chemicals leaves Rogers in a state of suspended animation for 492 years. He awakens in the future, where he is paraded around for public relations purposes. He soon learns that the leadership is lying to him, and he is drawn into a civil war. Sounds like a certain Marvel super-soldier, doesn't it? Buck Rogers' influence on the superheroes that dominate modern pop culture is just that obvious.

America in Buck Rogers' 2419 is dominated by an economically and technologically privileged upper-class called the 'Hans,' who rule the 15 remaining cities with fleets of deadly airships. The poor and disenfranchised are left behind in the barbaric wilds of what was once rural America. Buck Rogers' heroics against the 'airlords' unite the lower classes against the oligarchy in a way that prefigures modern dystopian sci-fi: Everything from The Hunger Gamesto The Walking Deadowes a debt to these dark visions of the future.

His forgotten namesake

For unknown reasons, when Philip Francis Nowlan helped adapt his own story to comic strip form, he retroactively changed his hero's name from 'Anthony Rogers' to 'William Rogers.' Perhaps Nowlan, or his publisher, John Dille, wanted the name to remind audiences of the everyman humorist Will Rogers, who was one of the most popular public figures of the day. Nowlan also gave his hero a snappy new nickname: The monosyllabic, instantly memorable 'Buck.'

The origin of this nickname is actually well documented: One of the most popular movie stars of the 1920s and 30s was Charles 'Buck' Jones, who was known for playing heroic cowboys in silent era Westerns. By giving Rogers the nickname 'Buck,' Nowlan and Dille were assuring their audiences, many of whom were new to the strange imagery and ideas of science fiction, that their hero was still of the familiar two-fisted he-man variety.

Buck Rogers, master of merchandise

In 1932, just three years after making the leap from pulp magazines to comic strips, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century became one of the first science fiction programs on the radio. Originally broadcast under the title The World in 2432, this program debuted episodes of 15 to 30 minutes, depending on the year of broadcast. The series ran until 1947, introducing a generation to the sci-fi genre ... and to a brand new world of product tie-ins.

Department stores dedicated massive amounts of floorspace to Buck Rogers merchandise, complete with costumed salespeople. Over the next decade, toy guns, model rockets, space helmets and practically every other product that could bear the Buck Rogers logo hit store shelves. The Buck Rogers XZ-31 Rocket Pistol, an art deco beauty manufactured by the Daisy Manufacturing Company, was the must-have Christmas gift of 1934. The day it hit shelves, lines of eager customers stretched across city blocks to enter Macy's 'World of Tomorrow' exhibit and get their hands on the coveted toy.

It happened at the World's Fair

In 1934, the John F. Dille Company decided to produce a short feature to promote the growing Buck Rogers brand on the biggest public stage of the day: The 1933 Chicago World's Fair, officiously christened the Century of Progress International Exhibition. This marketing idea may have been brilliant, but the John F. Dille Company lacked either the faith or the funds to deliver a film adaptation worthy of their character. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, which boasts the totally awesome and super-explanatory subtitle, An Interplanetary Battle with the Tiger Men of Mars, is spectacularly amateurish in every imaginable way, from the wooden performance by Dille's own non-actor son as Buck, to the special effects, courtesy of repurposed Buck Rogers toys. But as this film was screened in the Enchanted Island playground area, perhaps the shoddy craftsmanship didn't matter. It's easy to imagine that the little ones of 1933 were just delighted to see their hero in motion.

Only one man can save Buck Rogers ... Flash Gordon!

In 1939, Universal Studios produced a 12-part Buck Rogers serial starring two-time Olympic gold medalist Larry 'Buster' Crabbe as Buck. Crabbe had already put his charisma and swimmer's physique to good use in Hollywood, starring as Flash Gordon in that character's own Universal serial. Universal, thinking like a studio, repeated their successful formula with little reinvention and even less of a budget in Buck Rogers, even re-using the distinctive studded belt Crabbe wears in Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars.

Thus began a long, strange trip for the Buck Rogers serial — and Crabbe's place within it. In 1953, Goodwill Pictures recut the Buck Rogers serial into a feature entitled Planet Outlaws. The footage was recut again in 1966 to create a TV movie, Destination Saturn. Finally, in 1977, a third feature, simply titled Buck Rogers, was once again edited from the same footage, to take advantage of interest in the material renewed by Star Wars and the new Buck Rogers in the 25th Century TV series. An early episode of the first season of the latter series, entitled 'Planet of the Slave Girls,' features an appearance by none other than Buster Crabbe as Brigadier Gordon.

A comic book hero who predates comic books

Buck Rogers Complete Series Download Torrent Download

Long before they became respected as 'graphic novels,' comic books didn't even tell original stories. Instead, the earliest comic books were reprinted collections of newspaper comic strips. 1933's Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics is one such anthology of strips, and considered by most historians to be the first true American comic book. Buck Rogers comic strips were collected and reprinted in this new form almost immediately, spawning a series of 'Big Little Book' collections.

Starting in 1940, Famous Funniesbegan running reprints of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century as a regular feature. In 1969, when those same comic strips were collected into a scholarly hardback with a foreword by Ray Bradbury, Buck Rogers was re-discovered by a new generation of fans, who were now beginning to view comic books as their own art form. Buck Rogers' adventures, both new and old, have made their way into comics repeatedly ever since, most recently with Dynamite Comics' retelling of Buck's story in 2012.

A Buck Rogers TV show! No, not that one!

In 1950, Buck Rogers made a daring leap into television, a futuristic technology if ever there was one. Unfortunately, just as Buck Rogers was beaten to the big screen by his imitator, Flash Gordon, so too was he beaten to the small screen by the DuMont Network's 1949 production, Captain Video and his Video Rangers, which takes the honor of being the first weekly science fiction television series.

Already late to the party, ABC's Buck Rogerswas plagued by other issues that would spell its doom. These factors included stiff competition from the era's biggest star, Milton Berle, and the misfortune of having to recast the role of Buck not once, but twice during its one and only season. With the re-edited Universal serial starring Buster Crabbe already playing on television — and looking better, despite being over a decade old — this new television series was canceled and quickly forgotten.

Inspiring other wars in the stars

Filmmaker George Lucas has frequently cited the Universal Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials as inspirations for Star Wars. In fact, before he wrote the screenplay for Star Wars, Lucas attempted to acquire the rights to adapt the Flash Gordon comic strips. Fortunately for everyone, Lucas failed in that attempt.

Yet the echoes of those pulp stories live on in Star Wars. Consider Star Wars' infamous 'Style A' poster. Beyond its now-common images of space ships dogfighting in the stars and pistol-packing space princesses, it borrows many stylistic elements from those long-ago adventure serials. Just look at how brawny Luke is, and how much Leia resembles a slinky '30s femme fatale, complete with a low-cut dress she never sports in the movie. Moreover, many visuals that are now considered integral to the vocabulary ofStar Warscome straight from Buck Rogers. This includes the use of 'wipes' to transition from one scene to another, and even the iconic opening text crawl, which was first used in the 1939 Buck Rogers serial.

A Buck Rogers TV show! Again!

Just as George Lucas was inspired by Buck Rogers, the success of Lucas' 1977 blockbuster Star Wars inspired a legion of imitators ... including a reboot of Buck Rogers. In 1979, NBC produced Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, starring Gil Gerard and Erin Gray. This version reimagines Buck Rogers as an astronaut revived centuries too late from suspended animation, and introduces new characters, including the robot sidekick Twiki, voiced by cartoon legend Mel Blanc. Coincidentally, Blanc also voiced Daffy Duck in the Looney Tunes Buck Rogers parody, Duck Dodgers in the 24th 1/2 Century.

The feature-length Buck Rogers pilot was given a limited theatrical release, much as the producer, Glen A. Larson, had done successfully with Battlestar Galactica. But Buck Rogers' budget and quality never matched its sibling show. Frequently, sets and costumes from Battlestar Galacticawere recycled for Buck Rogers. Even the designs for Rogers' Thunder Fighters were actually just the original designs for Battlestar Galactica's Colonial Vipers.

Buck Rogers' untimely end

Fans amped up by Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica were clamoring for another weekly science fiction series, and were thus willing to overlook the low budget effects of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century's first season. But the second season left everyone — including star Gil Gerard — a little cold. New directives from NBC pushed more comedy and family-friendly adventure into the scripts, and the producers, in an attempt to replicate the success of space-focused series like Star Trek, moved Buck's story from the futuristic world of New Chicago to a wandering starship called the Searcher.

Gerard felt that the series had strayed too far from its original premise, and his protests soured the mood at the network. 'It was such a ripoff of Star Trek and Battlestar Galactica,' Gerard said, 'I was thinking, 'Why are we doing this?' I always wanted Buck to stay on Earth, but we got a new executive producer who had no respect for the audience and the show.' Thus, the show dwindled into nothingness, its last episode airing in 1981.

A legacy ... and beyond!

When Buck Rogers first zoomed onto the scene back in 1928, he displaced the cowboys, longtime heroes of American youth. Almost overnight, a fascination with space ships and ray guns swept America's kids. Cowboy heroes would persist through the 1950s, thanks to TV series like The Lone Rangerand The Roy Rogers Show, but they still had to share space with Buck Rogers and his growing legion of imitators. As the era of space travel and the race to the moon dawned, the battle between the Western hero and the science fiction hero for dominance of American popular culture was finally won by the men from beyond the stars.

Buck Rogers Complete Series

Westerns layered on moral ambiguity and grew increasingly dark. Though this has yielded many artistically superior movies, the commercial successes of the day still largely belong to sci-fi. This conflict — the displacement of the cowboy by the spaceman — is so ingrained in American popular culture that it is essentially the plot of Toy Story, with Buzz Lightyear standing in for Buck Rogers and his ilk.


(Links to 1302 images of the Buck Rogers comic strips are at the bottom of this introduction.)

In August 1928, Philip Francis Nowlan published a short story called 'Armageddon 2419 A.D.' in the science fiction magazine Amazing Stories. Six months later, in March of 1929, he published a sequel, 'The Airlords of Han'. The hero of both of these novellas was a man named Anthony Rogers. The tale told in this pair of stories begins with Rogers being overcome by a mysterious gas while inspecting a mine. The gas puts him into a coma from which he does not awake until five hundred years later. He finds himself in a world of advanced technology and amazing adventure.

The popularity of the two stories caught the attention of John F. Dille. Dille teamed up the author, Philip Nowlan, with cartoonist Richard 'Dick' Calkins within the syndication framework of the the John F. Dille Company to continue the tale in graphic form as a newspaper cartoon series for a mass audience.

It was in connection with the organization of this team effort that the name of the hero was changed from 'Anthony Rogers' to the snappier, 'Buck Rogers'.

Buck Rogers Complete Series Download Torrent Free

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Nowlan's, Dille's and Calkin's efforts combined to produce what was to become an important part of American pop culture. The comic strip itself ran for 38 years. In addition to this long-running comic strip, Buck Rogers was popularized in books, a television serial and a computer game. The Buck Rogers theme gave rise to emulations such as Flash Gordon and other swashbuckling space heros.

In Worcester, Massachusetts, the Buck Rogers comic strip series was carried by the Worcester Evening Gazette, appearing six days a week - Monday to Saturday. These Buck Rogers comic strips were collected by Roland N. Anderson (1916-1982) while working as a paperboy. He was able to assemble an almost complete collection of the series from its start in the Evening Gazette on February 4, 1929 until March 25, 1933. During this more than four year period 1302 daily strips were created by the Dille Company and Roland missed getting hold of only four of the strips published in the Evening Gazette - numbers 100, 1033, 1052 and 1129. Publication in the Evening Gazette, however, had began exactly four weeks after the official start of the series on January 7, 1929, so the series in the Evening Gazette was continuously behind other newspapers. In an effort to catch up a bit, the Evening Gazette skipped strips 667 to 672, publishing strip 666 on Saturday, March 21, 1931 and then strip 673 on Monday, March 23, 1931. Additionally, the Evening Gazette wasn't published on the Fourth of July national holidays and the Gazette skipped strips scheduled to be published on those dates to avoid falling further behind. Occasionally, when Roland was unable to obtain a certain strip, the night editorial staff helped him, providing the missing strip either from some reserve or the strip as published in the Boston Herald. This was the case on July 4, 1931 as the strip included here originated from that source. The strips from the Boston Herald can be identified by the deviant type in the titling. Titles were set locally at the newspapers, only the images were provided by the Dille Company.

All in all, the strips that Roland was unable to obtain, together with unpublished strips, totaled 14 missing strips - 100, 130, 667-672, 731, 1033, 1046, 1052, 1075 and 1129. To fill these gaps, images of these 14 strips were obtained from gray-scale archival film sources, reduced to black-and-white and then artificially colored to provide the same visual impression as the scanned images.

The narrational structure of the Buck Rogers comic strips is much like that of a soap opera - a series of adventures of varying lengths with short transitions between each adventure. Centered below is a synopsis of the Buck Rogers series. Each sentence describes some escapade in the series. By clicking on a sentence a reader is carried to that daily strip where that adventure begins. Each comic strip has a number written somewhere in the lower right hand corner of each strip. Some browsers will also display these numbers in the lower left hand corner of the window frame. If someone quits reading some segment of the Buck Rogers narration before having read it all and then at some later date wishes to return to where he left off, this can be done by entering the number of that particular comic strip here.

Buck Rogers Complete Series Download Torrent Site

Because of the large number of images, this presentation is written in such a way that any links must be made to this page and not to individual images. It is possible to navigate directly from this page to any image.

Twelve-year-old boys of all ages, looking for nifty rocket ships, can find some of them on strips 102, 175, 316, 368, 452, 584, 588, 613, 620, 747, 756, 762, 772, 930, 946, 970, 979, 1007, 1021, 1024, 1150, 1233, 1241, 1253, 1261 and 1268.

This material is presented here solely for educational purposes and to help maintain a continued interest in the Buck Rogers phenomenon and the people behind it.

In 2009, high-quality reproductions of the Buck Rogers comic strips were published in easy-to-read book form by Hermes Press. The series is presented in several hard-bound volumes entitled, 'Buck Rogers in the 25th Century'. The Hermes Press presentation is more extensive than this collection.


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