| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
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| Science-Fiction |
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| Horror |
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| Fantasy |
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ELECTRIC DREAMS
Rating: 
USA. 1984.
Director Steve Barron, Screenplay Rusty Lemorande, Producers Rusty Lemorande & Larry De Waay, Photography Alex Thomson, Music Giorgio Moroder, Video Graphics Tim Boxell, Mechanical Effects David Harris, Production Design Richard MacDonald. Production Company Virgin Pictures.
Cast:
Lenny Von Dohlen (Miles Harding), Virginia Madsen (Madeline Roberstadt), Bud Cort (Voice of Edgar)
Plot: Architect Miles Harding buys a personal computer to help organize his life. He chooses a machine that takes over and manages all his electrical appliances, lighting, cooking and home security. But after Miles spills champagne on the computer in a foolish attempt to cool it down during an overload, it starts to develop a mind of its own. Hearing cellist Madeline Roberstadt rehearsing in the apartment above, the computer electronically accompanies her on its synthesizer. Thinking that this is Miles, she is touched. The two of them quickly fall in love. Not telling Madeline about the computer, Miles starts teaching it about love in order to get it to write love songs for her. But as the computers intelligence begins to grow, it starts to become jealous of him, wanting to love Madeline for itself.
Electric Dreams is a sweet little film. The playful computer-styled credits promisingly announce it as a fairy-tale for computers. After all at that point we had had films about computers and robots with sexual needs Demon Seed (1977), Saturn 3 (1980) why not romantic ones as well? But what follows is all a little too po-faced towards its subject to work. Electric Dreams lacks the promised effervescence, it is merely earnestly enthused when it should be colourfully tongue-in-cheek. And what should have been dizzy slapstick emerges as only heavy-handed. The romance is pleasant but bland Virginia Madsen is, as always, fine but Lenny Von Dohlen, of unsettlingly piercing eyes, is played as an incredible drip.
Electric Dreams ultimately feels more like an extended promo for its soundtrack album (it was after all made by the film subsidiary of the Virgin Records label) than a film. Director Steve Barrons background was in MTV and it seems he has never left it the film is really staged around the songs, a series of three-minute set-pieces where everything often stands still and Steve Barron throws up a series of pleasantly disconnected visual montages while waiting for the song on the soundtrack to end. Barrons camera is never still, craning and Steadicam zooming through the interiors to frame everything in stylish perspective. Its energetic, but is there much point? Electric Dreams is a nice film, but is rather hard to take seriously when one is asked to take the bland warblings of Boy George or the flat inflectionless voice of Phil Oakey as all that is representative of beautiful love music.
Steve Barron went onto direct a number of other genre works including Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990), Coneheads (1993), The Adventures of Pinocchio (1996), Rat (2000) and Choking Man (2006) and the tv mini-series Merlin (1998), Arabian Nights (2000) and Dreamkeeper (2003). Barron was also co-founder of Canadas Mainframe Entertainment, the worlds first commercial computer animation studio who have produced the likes of the ReBoot (1994-8) and Beast Wars: Transformers (1996-9) tv series. Writer-producer Rusty Lemorande went onto direct Cannons disaster-laden Journey to the Center of the Earth (1988) and an adaptation of the classic ghost story The Turn of the Screw (1993).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
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