San Diego Union-Tribune

DIRECTOR OF ‘GET CARTER,’ ‘FLASH GORDON’

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British filmmaker Mike Hodges, who directed gangland thriller “Get Carter” and sci-fi cult classic “Flash Gordon,” died Dec. 17. He was 90.

Hodges died at his home in the county of Dorset in southwest England on Saturday, his friend and former producer Mike Kaplan told British media on Wednesday. No cause of death was given.

Born in the English port city of Bristol in 1932, Hodges trained as an accountant and did two years of compulsory military service aboard a Royal Navy minesweepe­r, visiting poor coastal communitie­s around England.

“For two years, my middle-class eyes were forced to witness horrendous poverty and deprivatio­n that I was previously unaware of,” he wrote in a letter to The Guardian earlier this year.

The experience influenced his feature debut, 1971 thriller “Get Carter,” which he wrote and directed. It starred Michael Caine as a gangster who returns to his home city of Newcastle on the trail of his brother’s killers. Remembered for its unflinchin­g violence, vividly gritty northeast England locations and jazz score, it’s considered a British classic.

Caine also starred in Hodges’ 1972 crime comedy “Pulp.” Hodges went on to direct 1974 sci-fi thriller “The Terminal Man,” starring George Segal as a scientist who turns violent after electrodes are implanted in his brain.

“Flash Gordon,” made amid the science fiction deluge unleashed by the success of “Star Wars,” was released in 1980. A campy romp inspired by 1930s adventure comics, pop music videos and expression­ist cinema, it was a hit in Britain and gained an internatio­nal cult following.

Hodges’ 1985 sci-fi comedy “Morons from Outer Space” was less successful.

His 1980s films also included “A Prayer for the Dying,” starring Mickey Rourke as a former IRA militant, and “Black Rainbow” with Rosanna Arquette as a psychic medium targeted by a killer.

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