Rollerball (1975) - EXPIRED 9/1/13
Once upon a time, in a decade far, far away, science-fiction movies were built on ideas, not special effects. Before Star Wars changed the rules (and box-office expectations), all you needed to make a sci-fi flick were a respectable actor (say, Sean Connery or Charlton Heston or Robert Duvall), a script with some cautionary message reflecting the day's concerns, a newly built, futuristic-looking mall or campus as your setting, a few cool-looking props and/or model space ships, and maybe a miniature of a domed city. Presto�big-screen dystopian future. Those were the days of Zardoz, Logan's Run, Soylent Green, The Man Who Fell to Earth, and THX-1138, among others. Granted, most are not what you'd call "great" films, but they're all provocative and idiosyncratic (and flawed) in ways that give them an organic charm�something sorely missing from today's machine-stamped blockbusters. Even Rollerball�which posits a future run by benevolent corporations who keep the peace by pitting nations against each other in an internationally sanctioned blood sport�alternates its bursts of violence with hushed, meditative talks about free will and human nature (as well as the random burning of trees as party trick).Read more �
No comments:
Post a Comment