davemerrill wrote:I know Logan's Run is seen as pretty campy these days (and it is!), but there's something really effective in the way it slaps the sleazy 1970s hedonism of anonymous sex, recreational drugs, gauzy tights for everybody up against sudden, violent, societally-approved death. I first saw it as a kid on TV (and even then I thought the model work was abysmal) but Carousel, the death-masks, the blinking life-clocks, the eerie plastic smiles; it all works to unsettle. The practical effect of the Sandman pistols still holds up really well, too. After Logan and Jessica get out of the city, the movie doesn't work nearly as well.
Logan's Run, Battlestar Galactica, and Buck Rogers all share the same producer, Glen A. Larson.
The original novel is a lot more science-fictiony; In the book there are transport tubes that link every city on Earth and Logan and, uh, whatsisname, the Sandman chasing him, spend a lot of time zipping from city to city.
I think you have Saul David confused with Glen Larson. Logan's Run was a MGM production, not Universal.
Logan's Run is fascinating to me for a different reason. It's pretty much the 'last gasp' of what was then the current Hollywood image of SF- the Dystopian Future.
Hollywood SF all thru the '70s was pretty much universally concerned with the world going to hell (as time went on it was less 'Nuclear War' and more 'Man f**ks up the Ecology') and overall cranked out one depressing movie after another. The last couple of Apes movies, Soylent Green, The Omega Man, Silent Running, The Ultimate Warrior, Zardoz, Rollerball, ZPG and a number of others. MGM's Logan's Run and 20th Fox's Damnation Alley were both supposed to be the 'big budget' hits of '76 and '77 but of the two only Logan's Run did decent box office. Then there was that other SF movie Fox was releasing in '77 called The Star Wars. *Pfft* lame.
I really don't know why the model shots in Logan's Run are so...juvenile. It wasn't for lack of money, I don't think it was for lack of time, all I can figure is they must have seriously low-balled the bidding, thinking they could get away with 'Things to Come' level detail (which looked MUCH better than what we got in Logan's Run) without the actual skill level of how to shoot it.
OTOH, it sort of fits the antiseptic look of living under the Domes. I don't think I'd like someone going in and replacing all the shots with CGI.