All for the love of renewal, it’s Burl,
here to review a movie that epitomized the state of studio sci-fi in the years
leading up to Star Wars! That picture
is of course Logan’s Run, and with
its big budget yielding dinky-toy trick effects and a costume design composed
mainly of pajamas, we must nowadays regard it as more of a curio than anything
else! Ha ha, it’s hard to believe that Blade Runner came along only six years after this!
The big hook of this picture, as we all
know, is the concept: it’s two hundred years into the future, the world has
been irrevocably changed by nuclear war or some environmental catastrophe,
everyone lives a life of pleasure in a big shopping mall, but, once you turn
thirty and the little jewel in your hand starts blinking red, it’s time for
Carousel, where you put on tights and a hockey mask, fly around the room for a
bit, then explode in sparks! Ha ha!
Michael York, whom we know from Phantom of Death and the remake of Not Of This Earth, and Richard Jordan
from Dune, The Mean Season and The Hunt for Red October, play two sandmen, the police in charge of finding and
killing anyone who may run from this sparky fate! They make a habit of
toying with their victims, which makes them seem very nasty I must say! But when Michael York’s
Logan meets Jessica, played by the comely Jenny Agutter from An American Werewolf in London, and gets
an assignment he can’t refuse from the unfair city computer, he finds himself
on the run, blinking red before his time, dodging his ex-friend Francis, and the
laser beams of the demented cosmetician Doc (who reminded me a bit of the Surgeon-General of Beverly Hills from Escape From L.A.); scampering through the Love Shop
and avoiding the depredations of the towering, silver, fearsome lunch robot
Box! Ha ha!
Waiting for Logan and Jessica outside the
city dome is not the Sanctuary they’d been led to expect, but a dotty old
cat-loving jasper played by the great Peter Ustinov from Spartacus! Francis shows up, unable to comprehend that everything
he’d learned in the dome was a lie, and he has a freakout, but a quick
flagpoling settles his hash, ha ha! Later, when Logan and Jessica bring the old
duck back to the dome, Logan brings these truths to the city computer as he had
to Francis, and it has a freakout too, and simply blows up!
Now it’s true that I enjoy this picture,
that it’s campy and fun; but it’s equally true that it’s silly and unwieldy and
poorly-structured and ponderous! Had it been made with dexterity and a
thoughtfulness that went beyond the obvious surface-level chase narrative, and
with some specific, passionate vision of human nature, it might really have
been something! As it is, I give Logan’s
Run two fish, sea greens, and plankton from the sea! Ha ha!
I'm pretty sure this was the first movie I saw a bare naked lady in, and predictably she was Jenny Agutter, who had a habit of taking those roles. She even takes her bloomers off in The Railway Children.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, Logan's Run looked ridiculous in 1976, so imagine how it looks now. But I find it strangely compelling, maybe it's the nostalgia talking, it is more enjoyable than Damnation Alley, the other sci-fi epic that's often cited as how out of touch Hollywood science fiction was just pre-Star Wars. At least the future has black people in it in Damnation Alley, mind you!
Ha ha, yes, the lily-whiteness of every single character and extra in this movie stood out to me, too, and I meant to mention it in my review! But as for the black presence in Damnation Alley: Paul Winfield has always existed and will always exist, ha ha!
DeleteI was 16 when Logan's Run came out and it gave me the creeps! :D Oh no, I've only got 14 more years to live. :D Me and my friends enjoyed it, so thumbs up!
ReplyDelete