COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT(1970)With Eric Braeden, Susan Clark, Gordon Pinsent, William Schallert, Loenid Rostoff, Georg Stanford Brown, Marion Ross, Paul Frees (voice of "Collosus") Directed by Joseph Sargent Reviewed by JB |
We often think of the 1950s as the Golden Age of Science Fiction Films,
yet from the late 1960s through the '70s there were a string
of intelligent, often socially conscious sci-fi movies that
rivals
the peak of any other genre from any other time. To name a
few:
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, PLANET OF THE APES (and one or two of
its
sequels), THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN, WESTWORLD, SILENT
RUNNING, LOGAN'S RUN, SOYLENT GREEN and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD
KIND. *
COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT is an underrated gem from the dawn of this period. Based on a novel by D.F. JONES, COLLOSUS tells the tale of a NORAD-like defense computer that begins to have ambitions beyound its original programming. Within minutes of being switched on, it discovers and connects with a similar Russian computer named Guardian, and together, the two supercomputers work together to make over the world to their liking. With control over both countries nuclear arsenals, they have a lot of power to back up their threats. Somebody is not produced in five minutes? Washington will be toast.
With a minimum of special
effects and heavily
dependent on characters reading screens and looking at monitors,
COLOSSUS has all the ingredients for tedium. But TV director
Joseph Sargent may have been the perfect man for tackling this talkie,
potentially static material, and the literate script and fine
performances from Eric Braeden, William Schallert and Susan Clark help
make the film an engaging, if ultimately pessimistic,
thriller.
- JB
ADD
ANOTHER QUOTE AND MAKE IT A GALLON
"WHAT ARE YOU MAKING?"
"A Martini."
"THAT IS TOO MUCH VERMOUTH."
IS THAT WHO I THINK IT IS?
Along will a bunch of well-known character actors such as William Schallert and Dolph Sweet, and soon to be famous actors such as Eric Braeden and Marion Ross, COLLOSUS features Paul Frees as the "voice" of the supercomputer late in the film. Frees was one of animation's hardest working voice actors, remembered by fans as Boris Badenov from Rocky and Bullwinkle and Burgermeister Meisterburger from Santa Claus is Coming to Town. He also provided the hilariously inappropriate "fey English" voice of John Lennon and the just plain wrong Scottish accent of George Harrison for The Beatles cartoon of the 1960s.