| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
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| Science-Fiction |
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FUTUREWORLD
Rating:
USA. 1976.
Director Richard T. Heffron, Screenplay George Schenck & Mayo Simon, Producers James C. Aubrey & Paul N. Lazarus III, Photography Gene Polito & Howard Schwartz, Music Fred Karlin, Visual Effects Brian Sellstrom, Special Effects Gene Griggs, Art Direction Trevor Williams. Production Company Aubrey Co/Paul N. Lazarus III/AIP.
Cast:
Peter Fonda (Chuck Browning), Blythe Danner (Tracy Ballard), Stuart Margolin (Harry Croft), Arthur Hill (Duffy), John Ryan (Dr Schneider)
Plot: A group of journalists and international politicians are invited to a private tour of the Delos amusement park shortly before it is due to re-open under its new management. But two of the journalists, Chuck Browning and Tracy Ballard, become suspicious and sneak away to investigate. There they manage to uncover a plot to replace world leaders with android duplicates.
Michael Crichtons Westworld (1973), with its ingenious concept of an amusement park where androids enact Western myths for tourists suddenly going amok, was an unexpected success. The success of Westworld then ended up producing this sequel.
But while Westworld was an ingeniously witty idea conducted with panache by Crichton, Futureworld on the other hand is merely a B film made on an A-budget. Michael Crichton used Westworld as a sharp and intelligent exploration of his recurrent fear of technology going amok, all underscored with a potent satire on the myths embodied by the movie Western. Futureworld merely reduces Crichtons ideas to a clichéd B-movie mad scientist and android duplication and takeover plot. The film writes these clichés as though nobody had heard of them before.
Its clearly a film written by people who know almost nothing about electronics or computers. Much of what happens is poorly thought out why, for example, is it necessary to have androids manning the control room and manually inputting data? If automation has developed to the extent that humans are not needed then why not automate the entire control room? Also rather amusingly it appears that having an android duplicate made of you also means that it is capable of reading your mind. There is a sort of desperation involved in the dream sequence, which is there solely to reintroduce Yul Brynners gunslinger from the first film, this time to bizarrely feature as an object of sexual fantasy.
The film gets a good deal out of shooting on location at NASAs Manned Space Center in Houston which gives an impressive hi-tech look that is much more lavish than the original. Peter Fonda and Blythe Danner, Gwyneth Paltrows mother, pass mechanically through their roles.
Futureworld was not the end to the Westworld saga a short-lived tv series Beyond Westworld aired in 1980.
Director Richard T. Heffron has mostly worked in television. His one other film of any note is the remake of Mickey Spillanes I, The Jury (1982). Heffrons one other venture into science-fiction sequels was the tv mini-series V: The Final Battle (1984).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999
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