HENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *sociological*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *sociological*
I’ve not read any of the three novels
written about Logan and his world by William F. Nolan and George
Clayton Johnson, but I wouldn’t have any trouble believing the
statement that the movie doesn’t borrow much from them but the bare
situation. In every way, the film LOGAN’S RUN seems like a bad
imitation of the better dystopian novels found in prose science
fiction.
RUN puts forth an idea that was
well-traveled even in 1976. Following a nuclear catastrophe, a group
of human beings take refuge in a city where their entire destiny is
controlled by a computer. In order to maintain the city’s fragile
ecosystem, the computer or its long-deceased programmers have
engineered a “Big Lie” to prevent overpopulation. At the age of
thirty, all citizens must participate in “Carousel,” in which
their bodies are destroyed but their souls are later reincarnated.
The other citizens watch the spectacle and cheer as if witnessing
arena-fights, possibly because the old bodies of Carousel-victims
appear to get blown up. Nevertheless, most citizens believe that
their fellows will come back renewed—though there are a few
unbelievers.
Said apostates, called “Runners,”
seek to evade their fate in the ritual by escaping the borders of the
city. While one might think the city-computer would welcome such
desertions to get rid of surplus population, apparently the machine
has been programmed to persecute such dissidents by sending enforcers
called “Sandmen” to execute the Runners. Two such enforcers are
Logan (Michael York) and his buddy Francis (Richard Jordan). In
addition to genuinely believing in their mission, the two city-cops
enjoy all the privileges of sybaritic life, which includes swanky
living-quarters and getting hooked up with potential temporary mates,
actual marriage being unknown. Logan makes an attempt to hook up with
a young woman named Jessica (Jenny Agutter). When she doesn’t come
across like most city-women, Logan is mildly intrigued by Jessica’s
refusal.
Not only does the computer not want any
dissidents escaping its reach, it keeps tabs on the beliefs of the
Runners. The computer enlists Logan for a special assignment, to find
the place called Sanctuary, to which refuge many escapees have
supposedly migrated. To sell the idea that Logan wants to be a
Runner, the hapless Sandman’s own life-cycle is cut short, so that
he can infiltrate the dissidents and locate Sanctuary. The
Runner-ranks just happen to include Jessica, who despite her earlier
refusal is quite taken with Logan and helps him make contact with the
“underground.”
Sadly, the script’s idea of the
Runner-underground is even more poorly worked out than the rationale
behind Carousel. Logan and Jessica experience an assortment of
disjointed adventures—one of which includes Farrah Fawcett, prior
to her star-making breakout on CHARLIE’S ANGELS—and eventually,
with no real help from other Runners, the two fugitives succeed in
escaping the city. However, Logan’s comrade Francis hasn’t been
let in on the deception, and he relentlessly pursues the escapees,
intending to terminate both of them. Passing over some of the more
pretentious experiences of the fleeing couple, eventually the two of
them return to the city and liberate all of the gullible citizens
from the computer’s control.
To misquote John Lennon, LOGAN’S RUN
sports enough plot-holes to fill up Albert Hall. Such inconsistencies
don’t automatically doom a film, though, and I can find various
plot-problems with the 1968 PLANET OF THE APES. Yet in RUN’s case,
the only thing the movie has going for it is its (rather minor)
ability to conjure with the audience’s fears of such fantastic
eugenics-programs, and that appeal is cancelled out by the script’s
artless coincidences and dramatic posturing. Actors York, Jordan and
Agutter all project utter sincerity in their thinly-drawn roles, but
none of them are able to infuse life into the ramshackle structure.
Arguably, though RUN was not quite the
last of the “didactic sci-fi problem films” that proved popular in
the sixties and seventies, the movie may represent a temporary
culmination of the form for that time-period—or maybe a burnout
case, since RUN is in no way equal to the best of that tradition. By
the next year, STAR WARS temporarily became a major, if not
exclusive, model for big-budget science fiction films. Perhaps
coincidentally, STAR WARS’ careful attention to physical
detail—whether with respect to space battles or comical
robots—makes LOGAN’S RUN seem even more hackneyed, especially
when the post-STAR WARS viewer gets a look at “Box,” RUN’s
extremely cheesy version of a mouthy robot.