- BARBARELLA
- 1. COMIC strip created by French artist Jean-Claude Forest (1930-) for V.Magazine in 1962. The interplanetary SEX adventures of the scantily clad blonde astronaut were collected as Barbarella (graph coll 1964; trans Richard Seaver1966 US). Despite its humorous attitudes, B incurred the wrath of French censorship. This row and the subsequent film version have tended to obscure the elegance and inventive sf content of the strip. Forest's later attempts to revive it, reducing the sex and increasing the sf elements, were less successful. Among his later, lesser known comic books is the witty La revanche d'Hypocrite ("The Revenge of Hypocrite") (graph 1977).2. Film (1968). De Laurentiis-Marianne/Paramount. Dir Roger Vadim, starring Jane Fonda, John Phillip Law, Milo O'Shea, David Hemmings, Anita Pallenberg. Screenplay Terry Southern, Jean-Claude Forest, Vadim, Vittorio Bonicelli, Brian Degas, Claude Brule, Tudor Gates, Clement Biddle Wood, based on the comic strip by Forest. 98 mins. Colour.Like Forest's strip, this Italian-French coproduction parodies the conventions of PULP-MAGAZINE sf as typified by FLASH GORDON but, where Forest's work was spare, Vadim's is lush, and it loses some of Forest's sharpness. The film is sometimes funny but seldom witty, despite the presence of Southern among the multinational crowd of eight scriptwriters. Barbarella (Fonda), agent of the Earth government, is sexually and culturally innocent in the manner of VOLTAIRE's Candide. Her search for a missing scientist on the planet Sogo results in an ever more baroque series of (mostly sexual) encounters: with sadistic children and their carnivorous dolls, with a blind angel (Law), with an inadequate revolutionary (Hemmings), with a pleasure machine and with the decadent lesbian Black Queen (Pallenberg), among others. Fonda - whose clothes look as if designed by Earle K.BERGEY - is memorable for her attractively wide-eyed air, combining eroticism with bafflement. FEMINIST critics were outraged at Vadim's exploitation of his real-life wife's sexuality in so voyeuristic a manner - he had done it before with Brigitte Bardot - though his evocation of the decadence he so obviously enjoys appears adolescent rather than corrupt. The exoticism with which the planet Sogo is created is what makes B a distinguished sf film; a real, if intermittent, SENSE OF WONDER is created by the sheer alienness of Mario Garbuglia's production design and Enrico Fea's art direction, all glowingly photographed by Claude Renoir.
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.