Hi, it’s Burl! Do you like movies about
science lads? Ha ha, I sure do! And there was no greater boom in this little
genre than in the mid 1980s, when movies like Weird Science, My Science
Project, Real Genius, Deadly Friend and Flight of the Navigator came out! And don’t forget D.A.R.Y.L.! Well, one of my favourites
of the bunch is a lesser-known one, not as goofy or fantastical as most of the
others, but very sciencey! It’s The
Manhattan Project, a picture made by Woody Allen’s one-time crony Marshall
Brickman!
The film is set pleasantly in Ithaca, New
York, where atomic laser scientist John Lithgow has just set up shop to
secretly make plutonium for the government! Meanwhile a local science lad,
named Paul as so many of them are, catches wind of this operation when the
affable Lithgow starts asking his mom out on dates! Ha ha! In concert with
burgeoning girlfriend Cynthia Nixon, Paul decides to expose the true workings
of “Medatomics Company” by stealing some of its plutonium and constructing his
own nuclear bomb! Oh, ha ha!
In its first half the picture offers up a
quite decently done heist in science lad clothing! Paul may be a little
cleverer than is realistic - his heist, which is quite complex, is conceived
of, planned, equipped and pulled off all in the time it takes for a
thunderstorm to pass through town - but the writing, and the performance by
Christopher Collett as Paul, keep things reasonably grounded!
And as with all the best of the science
pictures, this one offers up some not-so-veiled criticism of America, the
Reagan administration, and the military-industrial complex to which they were
all in thrall! By the time army man John Mahoney and his legion of snipers come
busting in, not in the least reluctant to kill Paul in order to get his nuclear
device from him, one is as unsure of Paul’s motivations as ever, but is nevertheless
convinced he’s somehow in the right! And ha ha, while there’s a happy ending in
which Mahoney lets Paul go and just flies away, we can’t escape the conviction
that he’s looking at more than a few years in the federal pokey!
The picture is a solid piece of
craftsmanship, well acted and laced with plenty of welcome humour! It probably
benefits from not trying to be Spielbergian in any fashion - the chase through
the New York hotel with science lads pursued by feds recalls E.T. only by
accident, and doesn’t involve BMX bikes! Otherwise the picture doesn’t rely on
action shenanigans at all, and spends a lot more time debating ethics than
Spielberg or his acolytes would have!
I saw this one in the movie theater, and enjoyed
it! I’ve been watching it lately with my son and it’s still a good-natured bit
of brinksmanship! Ha ha, I give The
Manhattan Project two and a half television T-shirts!
Definitely one of the better 80s whiz kid movies, but you do wonder why the kid built an atomic bomb in the first place, was he actually going to set it off to see if it worked?!
ReplyDeleteThought the movie was pretty good. Collett did seem a little on smug side.
ReplyDeleteHa ha, he definitely is that!
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