Film Review
Logan's Crawl would have been
a more accurate title, so slowly and clumsily does this lurching
abomination of a sci-fi movie dawdle along, like an asthmatic
one-legged tortoise on a broken Zimmer frame. This film is good
for one thing, and one thing only: to fully appreciate the enormous
revolution in sci-fi entertainment that George Lucus and Steven
Spielberg brought about with their more inspired offerings in the
genre,
Star Wars and
Close Encounters, both released
one year after this substandard mountain of crud. No one can
watch
Logan's Run today and
keep a straight face, and that's assuming the intrepid spectator can
stay awake long enough to see it through to the end.
There is certainly some mileage in the film's basic premise - a society
whose citizens must be murdered when they reach a certain age - but the
delivery is completely botched, through a dismal screenplay, some truly
uninspired direction, risible performances and special effects that
manage to be even less convincing than those seen in the weaker
installments of the TV series
Lost
In Space. The plot has more holes than a Gruyère
cheese and defies logic almost as effortlessly as an interview with
Sarah Palin, although even this is acceptable when you compare it with
the dialogue, which makes
Sesame
Street look like an Ingmar Bergman film.
Who would think that this grotesque sci-fi misfire was directed by the same man
who had helmed such well-regarded classics as
The Dam Busters
(1955) and
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956)?
Michael York and Jenny Agutter should have put in a claim for compensation - their
appearances in this film couldn't have done their careers much good.
Despite its manifest failings,
Logan's
Run is still (inexplicably) considered a classic in some
quarters. The film does have one or two entertaining moments
(including a nice histrionic outpouring from Farrah Fawcett) and does
offer a sobering reflection on the kind of society we may be at risk of
becoming (one that is completely desensitised to sex and violence,
whilst being totally subservient to authority). However, it is so
obviously a mere shadow of what it could have been if a more talented
production team had got their hands on it. A remake of the film
is currently in preparation, scheduled for release in 2010.
Rumoured to be more faithful to William F. Nolan's original novel, this
looks to be a far better bet than the camp yawn-a-minute monstrosity that
somehow found its way on to cinema screens in
1976.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the 23rd Century, their world ravaged by war and pollution, the last
survivors of the human race live in a great domed city. With all
work now undertaken by machines, mankind lives only for pleasure, but
at a price. To maintain the delicate equilibrium on which this
perfect society depends, nobody is allowed to live beyond his or her
thirtieth birthday. Having reached this age, everyone is expected
to enter the fiery Carrousel, which offers the prospect of rebirth
after being burned alive. Some do not wish to be reborn and
attempt to escape the city. These so-called runners are pursued
by armed guards known as the Sandmen, who despatch summary
execution. One Sandman, Logan 5, is instructed by the Computer to
venture outside the city and locate the Sanctuary, the place where the
runners are believed to be hiding. Logan's life clock is advanced
by four years so that he too must go on the run, or else end up in the
Carrousel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.