My stepdad was director Michael Anderson. Thanks for the love for his movie Logan’s Run.
@patricktilton537710 ай бұрын
Then your step-brother was the guy who played 'Doc', right?
@christopherholden771710 ай бұрын
@@patricktilton5377 yes Michael Anderson Jr. Is my stepbrother who played Doc.
@Point221b10 ай бұрын
That's something!
@lillygirl776810 ай бұрын
I wish you could thank him for me - this is one of my favorite movies. ❤️
@jeffhatcher658510 ай бұрын
One of my all time favourites. Superb
@grimacres10 ай бұрын
As a hormonal teenager I had a difficult time following the story because of the costumes.
@ML98837bob10 ай бұрын
So did every teen boy at that time! 😂 Great time to be alive!
@ML98837bob10 ай бұрын
@@proto-geek248 yeah, I can see that. That’s a pretty fun observation.
@historybuff664 ай бұрын
@@grimacres I had the same difficulty a few years prior, age 13, eyes glued to Stella Stevens in “The Poseidon Adventure”.
@breotan10 ай бұрын
A lot of Francis' missing seemed to be deliberate as he was playing with the person he was chasing.
@racookster10 ай бұрын
I thought exactly the same thing at that point in the video. When the sandmen missed, they were just being cruel. They did it on purpose like a cat playing with a mouse.
@hethel810 ай бұрын
I never thought that the sandmen were bad shots, I always thought that they aimed to miss to have more fun.
@Fenris7710 ай бұрын
Indeed.
@hirightnow10 ай бұрын
In the novel, there was different ammunition for different circumstances. For dispatching "runners", there was the "homer", which was a heat-seeking charge. It didn't tend to miss, so there wouldn't have been much shooting; just "BANG", then the runner dying. Not good for sci-fi action, so they changed the guns. (The guns' charges were an interesting study in the callousness of that society..."Tangler", "Ripper", "Nitro", "Needler", "Vapor", and "Homer"...)
@KevinLockamy10 ай бұрын
The thought that I came up with to explain the Sandmen's bad aim was that they were playing a sadistic cat and mouse game with the runners.
@CreativeWarrior-10 ай бұрын
Great film! I got to meet Farrah when I was 5 in Indian Wells, CA. 1977. She had been playing tennis there and I went up to her and asked if I could give her a hug. She said, "I'll come back after my match." She did and she picked me up and hugged me. Pretty cool!
@CraftAero10 ай бұрын
Mmmm, sweaty Farrah.
@CreativeWarrior-10 ай бұрын
@@CraftAeroPossibly, but I don't remember that being the case.
@CraftAero10 ай бұрын
@@CreativeWarrior- That's ok. In my "memory" she was. 🤩
@CreativeWarrior-10 ай бұрын
@@CraftAeroYour version sounds more fun.
@CyraNoavek10 ай бұрын
I have always interpreted the early chase scene with the Sandmen and the runner as the Sandmen playing with the runner. They were not missing they were toying. I think you might agree if you watch the scene with that idea.
@robjohnson852210 ай бұрын
1) To this day, I have a total *thing* for Jenny Agutter! When she popped up in the Captain America movie I cheered! 2) I was so-so on the book. The fact that no one raised the kids made it impossible for them to suddenly become all "peace and love" at 14. 3) I will pay for that deleted scene! :)
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
Haha :-) me too. My wife and I are in London quite a bit and I keep trying to locate her. One of these days I'm going to get her :-) cheers, Dan
@samr.england6134 ай бұрын
Her acting performance in LR, as well as, "An American Werewolf in London", was A-1 Top Notch.
@gospelaccordingtojohn89599 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter should have gotten an Oscar just for her lack of costume.
@Swindle198410 ай бұрын
In the novelization, Box is a human sex offender/serial killer turned into a cyborg as punishment, whose memory wipe doesn't quite change his personality entirely.
@edwardsawtell571210 ай бұрын
Never knew that! Cool!
@trappenweisseguy275 ай бұрын
That explains a lot.
@historybuff664 ай бұрын
@@Swindle1984 It wasn’t a “novelization” though-the film was based on a 1967 published original novel.
@historybuff6610 ай бұрын
Quite ingenious on Jerry Goldsmith’s part to have the score shift from a synthesizer laden score to a traditional orchestral based one as the action leaves the Dome city for the natural world outside it.
@jerrypadilla43844 ай бұрын
@michaelschramm1064 Thank you, for pointing this out. Many people miss this nuance, in the film.
@historybuff664 ай бұрын
@@jerrypadilla4384 You’re welcome. I’m very fond of Jerry Goldsmith’s inventiveness and versatility. His score to “Planet of the Apes” is still incredibly fresh and avant-garde even after over a half century.
@jerrypadilla43844 ай бұрын
@michaelschramm1064 Funny, I too, am a fan of his works, too.
@TheGamerZapocalypse10 ай бұрын
You didn't see the same movie if you think Sandmen were bad shots...they were playing with their prey... This gave them even more character as it showed their sadistic behavior, that they enjoyed it, before killing them !!!...RUN...RUNNER...!!! From the first encounter, they made a sick game of it! Another great Hero's Journey of a movie
@oneproudbrowncoat10 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter... man oh man oh man.
@toonman36110 ай бұрын
And she's been a nun for 13 seasons now.
@KipIngram9 ай бұрын
10:39 - Damn indeed. Jessica was pretty spectacular. She kind of defines that "eyes you can get lost in" thing.
@YAMISOOLD20099 ай бұрын
Thank you for this great video on one of my all time favorite movies. The escapism of this movie and the surreal effect it had on 10 or 11 year old me is hard to describe. It really just overwhelmed my senses and took me out of my drab world into one of color and excitement. I'm not sure any film is capable of that anymore since we all have so many colorful and engaging sensory distractions now. But in that time we still had a lot of long and slow and quiet child hood days and seeing a movie like Logan's Run could stay with you for months!
@martyjewell568310 ай бұрын
One of my favorite sci-fi movies. I particularly liked the old man character played by Mr. Ustinov. I liked the movie's references to the T. S. Elliot book Old Possum's Book... When my wife and me were dating in early 1980's we frequently lunched at a coffee shop on 44th Street near 6th Ave in NYC. Just down the street from the Algonquin Hotel. Once after lunch, we walked down the street and saw Mr. Ustinov exiting the hotel and tryin' to hail a cab, I asked if he needed help and he said yes. I ran out in the street and stopped a cab, screechin' brake's-n-all. As I open the taxi door for him he shook my hand and said thank you. I met Peter Ustinov!
@MidnightSculptor7 ай бұрын
the Sandman were not bad shots, they were sadistically torturing the runner.
@MoviesMusicMonsters7 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was just going for more of a comedic statement on that one.
@dbenci207110 ай бұрын
I always thought the sandmen were toying with the runners when shooting at them, giving them false hope of escape.
@garthtiffen31910 ай бұрын
that was exactly it
@scary_scat39249 ай бұрын
Yup 100%
@mxbishop10 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation! I saw this movie in 1976 in the theater during its opening run - with my girlfriend. Just loved it. A fond memory. The deeply saturated colors, the costumes, the flame pistols, and the amazing set pieces and FX - really made an impression on my pre _Star Wars_ brain. Dialog a little creaky here and there - and that is especially true when watching today. I think Box the Robot had the most memorable and quotable line in the whole movie: "Fish, and plankton, sea greens, and protein from the sea. It's all here - fresh as harvest day!" Sometimes I say this when I'm at the grocery store with my wife - and she asks me what's on the shopping list. I make sure to wave my arm out as though I'm saying "Behold" when I get to the "It's all here / harvest day" part. 🙂
@terrellwilliams519010 ай бұрын
Loved "Logan's Run". Hollyweird would mess it up if they decided to 'Remake' it. Really enjoy your 'Behind the Scenes' Videos - please keep them coming. If you are looking for ideas, how about "The Wild, Wild, West" Starring Robert Conrad & Ross Martin??? Your Title could be - "Whatever Happened to that Amazing Train?!" I always wanted to see James West teamed-up with the Lone Ranger & Zorro, but that never materialized - TV Executives had NO IMAGINATION back then, lol!!! Stay Motivated.
@starbrand37269 ай бұрын
In defense of Francis 7, he was toying with the runner, shooting near him to taunt him. He was missing on purpose.
@Saor_Alba10 ай бұрын
The main reason I wanted to see Logan's Run was I had a crush on Jenny Agutter ever since I saw her in the 1971 movie Walkabout, it remains one of my favourite SCi-Fi movies. It is, in my opinion, a little dated by today's standards and even in 1976 I found the acting a bit off but there was enough action and Jenny Agutter to keep my attention. Peter Ustinov brought much-needed light relief to the movie through his dialogue and acting, especially when his character recites a shortened version of the poem "The Naming of Cats" by T. S. Eliot.
@DAV4997.10 ай бұрын
Jenny is and still is gorgeous.
@dbuck535010 ай бұрын
Are you serious? I fell in love with her in Walkabout too!
@texaswunderkind10 ай бұрын
Watch "China 9, Liberty 37." You get to see a LOT of Jenny, ifyaknowwhatimean.
@CarnorJast113810 ай бұрын
One of my all-time favorites! Especially compared to what we get now-a-days masquerading as science fiction! I have and will always love this movie! "Last Day. Capricorn 15's. Year of the City....2274. Carousel begins!"
@erictaylor546210 ай бұрын
When I saw this movie for the first time as a young teen (13 or 14) 30 sounded like a pretty long time. at 54, it seems incredibly young.
@danadams647710 ай бұрын
Funny how our conception of time changes as we get older, huh? 56 here.
@lloydonlead10 ай бұрын
I was 12 in 76 when saw this and Jenny Agutter was just so gorgeous. Love the film.
@Mcvthree310 ай бұрын
Hers were my first movie boobs.
@cpace1236 ай бұрын
The DS Sandman blaster is one of my favorite sci fi pieces. I have made a few for my prop collection. Also Jenny Agutter is Stunning. I love Michael York in this. I love the movie with all it's faults. And PG yes, but they did not have PG-13 back then. But even PG-13 might be stretch. Thanks for another great show.
@wesrrowlands830910 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this as a kid on a sunday afternoon when they'd just have movies on randomly, it was surprising as it wasn't censored at all and this was the early 1980s.
@BarryHart-xo1oy10 ай бұрын
Ah,those were the days…
@destonlee28389 ай бұрын
I'm 54 and saw Logans Run on VHS is the mid 80s. Oddly, the older I grow, the more accurate it feels. Thank you US healthcare.
@justajo210 ай бұрын
I was a floor covering installer in 1983. The crew I was with spent several months in the Dallas Apparel Mart in the World Trade Center recovering the floors, about 20,000 yards of carpet. That's when I learned about parts of Logan's Run having been filmed there. The Great Hall was really impressive. I say "was" because the Apparel Mart was torn down in 2004(?) to make room for a larger building. The Fort Worth Water Gardens was also mentioned. I've visited it. Still there and still impressive.
@StevenBishop-c9r10 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr. Pal for some of my favorite movies...'War of the Worlds', and 'The Time Machine'. I could watch those until my eyeballs fell out
@noman60419 ай бұрын
Hey, Dan. In regards to the Sandmen being lousy shots..at the beginning when they are chasing the 'Runner' from Carousel, they are intentionally missing, toying with him to get him into the open. Then when they succeed in drawing him out, their shots are right on target. And when Logan and Francis are firing at each other they intentionally miss because they are friends and can't bring themselves to kill each other. [Francis himself makes this statement] So when Logan HAS to kill him to stop him, his shot is dead on. Also when Francis 'terminates' the female fugitive in the cathedral, he is dead on target. And the Marvel comics series adapted the movie in the first six issues, with No#7 starting the adaptation of the 'Logan's World' novel, but the series was cancelled because sci-fi comics just weren't popular at the time. Also Director Michael Anderson has a cameo in the film as the surgeon performing the 'New You' procedure on Logan.
@CasualHoarder-ny9sd10 ай бұрын
You will own nothing and you will be happy.
@originalsusser10 ай бұрын
You're in the wrong century
@Frank_Nemo10 ай бұрын
You repeat everything and learn nothing.
@RaymondBCrisp10 ай бұрын
Haha! One of my favorite memories as a child was taking over the family room for about a week to do my own reproduction of the cityscape. It was made with the various construction toys I had growing up, so it was this amalgamation of Legos, Tinker Toys, Lincoln Logs, and Girdlers and Panels sets, dressed up with paper facades that looked like they were from the movie. Speaking of that design aesthetic, I've often wondered if the designer of Denver International Airport wasn't a fan of the movie...
@BarryHart-xo1oy10 ай бұрын
That reproduction you did sounds fascinating.
@locusmortis10 ай бұрын
@9.35 They shot to miss on purpose, hunting runners was a game to them. Run Runner, RUN!
@mr541010 ай бұрын
As a 9 year old...this film blew my mind...saw the film 6 times at my local movie theater...yes... At 9 and 10 yrs old I sometimes had to con my way into buying a ticket to a rated R movie...it was the 70's...what can I say...😁👍😜
@1165mac10 ай бұрын
Logan's Run was rated PG. You could definitely get away with a lot more in a PG rated movie in the 70s, particularly nudity.
@aqacefan10 ай бұрын
Another scene cut from the final print was near the beginning of the movie, as Francis pursues and terminates a Runner in Arcade. The crowd applauds as Francis makes the kill, and the camera zooms in to the Runner's lifeclock as it goes black. The scene then dissolves into a closeup of a clear lifeclock as the camera pans back out to show one of the new babies in Nursery.
@charlesdeshazo825410 ай бұрын
I was working for a company that made wall art at the time and had a showroom at the Apparel Mart (which is now The World Trade Center in Dallas) and one my pieces appears in the film. I can't remember off the top of my head if it was on the wall in Logan's apartment and can be seen over his shoulder or on the wall in the hallway when he opens the door.
@edwardsawtell571210 ай бұрын
Cool!
@PavelMosko10 ай бұрын
The book was so much different the sandmen had a high-tech 6 shot revolver which had a unique specialized round for each chamber - poison gas, explosive, armor piercing, a homing bullet etc. Part of the suspense of the book is you only had one shot with your favorite round so you had to be creative and strategic using the ammo in a fight, and when your on the run.
@cl84410 ай бұрын
sounds like the lawgiver from judge dred
@clit_niblr037510 ай бұрын
@@cl844 - The lawgiver from Judge Dred is essentially a rip-off of the Sandmen gun.
@cl84410 ай бұрын
@@clit_niblr0375 even dredd sounds slight rip off of sandmen it started 10 years after logan novel plus dredd is set in a dome city and the judges are like sandmen in some.ways makes dredd look very cheap 😆😆😆😆
@cl84410 ай бұрын
@@clit_niblr0375 or here is a crazy thought dredd is what the city turned into without life clocks? the jidges are sandmen now that could work as a theory or its the other way around the judges evolved and life clocks invented could work either way fiction is like clay
@cl84410 ай бұрын
@@clit_niblr0375 the dredd comic has recycled food logan has recycled people..
@donnaa722610 ай бұрын
I loved Logan's Run when it first came out, and I own it this many years later. I love it just as much. Maybe even more.
@rolliebear4210 ай бұрын
In the mid 80s i had the opportunity to purchase one of the guns. They used calcium carbide and water to make acetylene gas. And a battery heated wire for combustion. I miss the days when movie props could be found at Sci-fi conventions.
@kevink993810 ай бұрын
so you’re the one who got there ahead of me 😂
@rolliebear4210 ай бұрын
@@kevink9938 I'd bought collectables from him before and after that. He wanted $250-300 for it. My limit for the weekend was half that. There were several pieces I had to pass on over the years. Found out over a decade later, my husband worked for him in highschool and college. Small world.
@starshipchi-rhostudio70977 ай бұрын
Thank you for another great video. Also, thank you for pointing out the dystopian nature of a lot of sci-fi in the seventies. I remember catching the negativity of many TV shows and movies when I was a kid. I enjoyed the reruns of the original Star Trek, because they were the most positive sci-fi stories at the time.
@susanmctavish663910 ай бұрын
A long time ago, I thought a remake would be cool but not anymore with today's Hollywood and politics. I wouldn't watch a remake. I love Logan's Run.
@EricSchryver-v8o9 ай бұрын
You got me on the kolchak episode.
@jimsmith92517 ай бұрын
I've just found your channel, i'm 54 and love all sci fi, gonna binge watch your fine work sir thank you so much, much love from the UK
@AzureWolf310 ай бұрын
Big fan of the Logan trilogy of books (Logan's Run, Logan's World, Logan's Search). I also loved the movie when it came out and now when I re-read the novels it's always Michael York and Jenny Agutter I see in my mind. I'd love to see them do a remake of the movie following the novel more closely, and even then follow it up with Logan's World. The one thing I didn't like about the movie was changing the sandman gun to a simple "blaster" weapon. The six unique charges in the Sandman's revolver was something that made the weapon very versatile and deadly. No missing with a "homer".
@Pslytely_Psycho_GreybeardGamer7 ай бұрын
Saw it at an outdoor theater that unfortunately, no longer exists. Man I miss the Drive In. This movie was massive fun. Even Box. The scene where they meet Peter Ustinov and his cats.....Classic, and a nice contrast to the movies overall darker theme. One of my favorites. Oh, yeah, the costumes....whew!!!! Oh ****. The Omega Man! The 70's was a great time to be a teenager.
@rayb857210 ай бұрын
FYI: Lindsay Wagner "Bionic Woman" was going to play Jessica until Jenny Agutter auditioned.
@willmfrank10 ай бұрын
"Fish! And plankton! And sea-greens! And protein from the sea! ...They stopped coming, and the others started... ...It's my job...to FREEZE YOU!"
@stephanielaurenbounds495810 ай бұрын
“OVERWHELMING!! AM I NOT?!!”
@willmfrank10 ай бұрын
@@stephanielaurenbounds4958 "MY BIRDS! MY BIRDS!!!"
@dog3y310 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter was my young fantasy for a long time. I loved her. When I saw her again in Marvel's Captain America : Winter Soldier I just couldn't believe it. She's still stunning.
@jasonotoole182210 ай бұрын
So glad you covered Logan's Run that was a great review of one of my favourite movies. While I lived in Fort Worth I had to visit the film locations in DFW and loved that I could walk to the Water Garden from my apartment. I first saw the TV series and cannot wait to see you talk about that too.
@internationalicon10 ай бұрын
Don’t forget that novel’s second author, George Clayton Johnson, who also gave us “Ocean’s 11”, and the first aired episode of Star Trek.
@SefuDonalBastet10 ай бұрын
A couple of the things the movie simply couldn't show was the scope of the civilization. When the book has Logan interacting with the kids on Muscle (think Meth mixed with Epinephrine and instant effect steroids) that was in "the dead zone" several hundred miles from tube linked domed cities.
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's why it would be neat if there was a really well done production of It today, kind of like they did with dune.
@donchoq10 ай бұрын
Saw it in the theater. Logans Run was about a year before Star Wars. Had to write a review of it for my high school English class. Still have the comic books!
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
Haha that's so cool :-) do you still have your report?
@donchoq10 ай бұрын
I do!! For the class, we had to watch a movie every week and do a review. At the end of the term, the teacher had put them into a pee-chee (remember those?) and returned them to us. I put it in a closet and it was still in my Mom's house!
@antonnym21410 ай бұрын
Farrah and I share a great grandmother, so we were second cousins, but I didn't know that when this movie came out. I was 16 and in love with her like all my friends were. Yes, we ALL had the poster! As far as me and my friends were concerned, If you didn't have that poster, there was just something wrong with you. Great times.
@JF-lt5zc10 ай бұрын
I never got the Farah thing. Then again, the dumb blond schtick was never my jam either. Now, Jenny A, whoa, what a looker.
@GenLeeConcepts10 ай бұрын
Dan, this was one of my favorite films of a lifetime. You're right about comparison to the original book. In fact, William Nolan was an aging hippy who lived in Van Nuys. It was fun, but also telling, seeing Farah in her tiny roll. But then, using Michael Anderson as the doctor was also rather unique. The gigantic waterfall/setting for returning to the city was actually from a beautiful/modern waterfall in the center of the city of Fort Worth). I had the pleasure of seeing it when visiting a relative. Anyway, thanks so much for sharing your knowledge. p.s. ya, those outfits were totally cool for this youngster-back in 1976! It's still in my Top 5...along with "Somewhere in Time"...oh, please, don't quote roger ebert...or any of those other weirdos...let them try to make movies. Those miniatures were terrific back then! rl
@chribm10 ай бұрын
Loved this movie. I remember going to the theater when it was released, saw it half a dozen times. Still love the movie and have my own DVD. All I have to say is Jenny!
@Turrican6010 ай бұрын
I loved the film, being an impressionable teenager back then, and it's definitely a classic in my eyes. Unlike Dan, I quite liked Box, even if it did seem a bit on the flimsy side, probably due to the weirdness of the body shape and head, not to mention the voice. In this respect, the robot just felt 'different', as did the film itself. As for Jenny Agutter, well, what a fine, very attractive actress she was. Michael York was simply perfect for his role, too. This was an ambitious, star-studded film that fully deserves this excellent review, and it certainly brings back some wonderful memories. Thanks a lot, Dan, and greetings from England.
@robertdavis57149 ай бұрын
15 year old teenager and walked into the theater for viewing and was Blown Away and being 15 the female outfits were wow, thought that outdoor scene was Malibu Creek (Live in SF. Valley) and yes own the DVD.
@Mustang95ism10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the look back. I, too, loved this movie when it came out and have owned it in every format: VHS, DVD, Blu Ray and, if you can believe it, CED (Capacitance Electronic Disk), the format that killed RCA. Still have my SelectaVison player and the damn thing still works. I've kept it because it functions with something actually called a "flux capacitor." I really hope they do not ruin Logan's Run with a remake.
@TheTwoFishes10 ай бұрын
Dan……The comment you made about Jessica in Logan’s Run, and how Box wanted to make an ice sculpture of them, but it showed too much of Jessica, and you went “Damn”, made me laugh out loud in hysterics, because I thought the same thing! How hot was Jenny Agutter (my film crush) in this movie. Thank you for your channel. I just subscribed tonight.
@lestersabados13069 ай бұрын
As a kid I was fascinated by Logans Run.
@greenmachine66389 ай бұрын
Absolute classic. One of my fav pre-80s movies. And Jessica, whooooo-weee 😘😘👌
@dbaggett459 ай бұрын
And who can forget her in An American Werewolf In London! 😀
@davesworld796110 ай бұрын
I was ten when this movie came out and living with my cousin Doug that year who was also ten. I remember seeing the movie and we did have that poster of Farrah on the wall.
@J0hnGalt739 ай бұрын
So in 1977, when I was 4, I saw the first release of Star Wars at a drive-in. It was a double feature with Logan's Run as the second showing. And while I would love to say that my mind was blown by Star Wars (this would happen a year later when Star Wars was re-released in 1978 and I watched it in a theater), I'm afraid seeing a nekkid Jenny Agutter was. at that formative moment, much more important than anything else I had experienced in my first 4 years. I carried that memory for 46 years until about 2 weeks ago when I purchased Logan's Run and rewatched. I had good taste, even at 4 years old. 😆😆😆
@jvburnes8 ай бұрын
She was also in Captain America: Winter Soldier playing one of Robert Redford's national security advisors.
@ewmlloyd10 ай бұрын
Slight correction on the pistols the Sandmen carried. The chamber contained calcium carbonate and water, which produced _acetylene_ gas. There was a huge battery in the grip that lit a glow plug in the muzzle that ignited the gas. When I first saw it, I thought it was a very good rotoscope job. But no, It was just this amazing practical effect!
@kevink993810 ай бұрын
someone was actually selling these at a sci-fi con in the eighties. i wanted it so much but the price was too high for 17 y/o me.
@jmaniak18 ай бұрын
The extra in the ending scene doing the Vulcan salute is one of my best friends. His mother was owner of Wyse Talent Agency in Dallas and got him the part. That scene was filmed at the Forth Worth water gardens.
@henrymach10 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter was the hottest woman alive in 1976
@starhunter230010 ай бұрын
I remember seeing Jenny Agutter in Walkabout when I was in Elementary School. Sure made an impression on me.
@Point221b10 ай бұрын
Ooh!
@jaxxbohol647510 ай бұрын
No way Lynda Carter easily…..
@Infinityfields10 ай бұрын
I loved this movie when I was a kid. So much that my son’s name is Logan. I have since bought this movie and Omega Man, Soylent Green, all the Planet of the Apes movies, The Last Man on Earth, WestWorld, 2001 A Space Odyssey, The Black Hole, Testament and The Quiet Earth. You could say some of these movies were flops compared to today’s blockbuster’s with all the CGI, but I enjoyed going to the movies as a kid and these movies made my world more entertaining. Logan’s Run was so good as a young 10 year old you could almost see thru the actresses costumes as they wore these silk fabrics with nothing underneath!
@poetcomic110 ай бұрын
And did you have a daughter you namedf Soylent?
@radarsteve-t4n10 ай бұрын
I've watched this movie countless times. If you think Jenny Agutter outfit was daring for a PG film, you should see her "suit" in "Walkabout" made in 1971 with a G rating, incredible.
@JoseyWales44s10 ай бұрын
To be honest, the Sandmen were missing their targets on purpose as they had a bit of sadistic fun making the Runners jump about, punctuated by laughter.
@Kane2651010 ай бұрын
There's a lot of truth to that. Lines that would be considered "throwaway" indicate that the sandmen looked at it as a sport rather than a job, and wanted a challenge (to some extent).
@docbrown655010 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter is still a beautiful lady.
@Ghostrider-719 ай бұрын
You are correct about that!
@albaniahenry-franklin28297 ай бұрын
ABSOLUTELY😍
@samr.england6134 ай бұрын
Don't forget her acting performance, which was superb.
@thereallisamarchbanks10 ай бұрын
I'm from the Dallas/Fort Worth area. Our community was always so proud of this film. I kissed my 1st boy and got high at the Fort Worth Water Gardens. 😁
@texaswunderkind10 ай бұрын
Lifetime Logan's Run fan. The day I finally was going to see the fountain, somebody from Chicago had drown in it. I wanted to stand on the edge and shout: "You can live...LIVE!!!" but my girlfriend wouldn't let me.
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
Nice :-)
@michaeldiogenesbest61278 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter was soooo YUMMY!! See "Walkabout".....
@Komikino10 ай бұрын
When I was a child and watched this (or was it the TV show....??? I can't remember. LOL!) I was amazed at the guns! I loved how they would shoot the flash out the muzzle. It looked so cool. I am glad you mentioned them here.
@HikaruKatayamma7 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this in the theaters as a kid. I loved it.
@dragonweir7 ай бұрын
Hello, Love the channel. Just watched the piece on "Logan's Run". There was a fancy vehicle that was part of Logan's escape. It found its way into a private collection and was repurposed to star in other sci fi films. The Phamtom empire ,1988, with Jeff Combs and Ross Hagen.
@brianmcguinness964210 ай бұрын
I had the impression that the sandmen were missing on purpose to toy with their victims.
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
Yeah you're probably right. I was just being sarcastic :-)
@Point221b10 ай бұрын
God, sandmen!
@TheDrRJP10 ай бұрын
Dan, the idea of dying at 30 in the movie made perfect sense given the counterculture mantra of the '70's to never trust anyone over 30. I thought Logan's Run was great sci-fi and also very much enjoyed the costumes, too. The scenes in the Love Shack are the reason why you bought VCRs that could be paused, advanced frame by frame and run videos in slow-motion. 😍 You mentioned that nowadays we have an app for hooking up with someone for sex like Tinder. The Logan's Run version of Tinder was called the "Circuit" and that's how Logan (Michael York) hooked up with Jessica (Jenny Agutter). From what I understood , Carousel was a ritual that everyone turning 30 had to go through in which they had a chance to have their life clock "renewed" (reset back to zero years elapsed). However, Logan began to question the arrangement when Francis casually asked him, "Why do people run? Why don't they take their chances like everyone else in Carousel?" Logan replied, "Have you ever met anyone who was renewed because I haven't." I also read the book after watching the flick and the big difference with the book is that Sanctuary was a place that actually existed (albeit on another planet) whereas in the film, everyone who tried to make it there got frozen by Box. The scenes with the "Old Man" played by Peter Ustinov was a favorite of mine because I'm a cat lover and the Old Man was taking care of dozens and dozens of abandoned cats running around the Capitol Building. He said that cats have three names: one name that cat owners call them; another name that cats know other cats by, and a third "secret" name that only an individual cat knows what it is.
@dogsplayingpoker239510 ай бұрын
When the sandmen were shooting at the runner they were missing on purpose. They were toying with him.
@schlirf10 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter, 'nuff said!
@montylc200110 ай бұрын
Beat me to it!!!
@curmudgeonextraordinaire188410 ай бұрын
I think they were missing on purpose. They were toying with the runner and it showed the sadistic side of the Sandmen.
@ebikeengineer10 ай бұрын
This is exactly how I saw it.
@brandonlordbaltimore518210 ай бұрын
Same. Agreed 💯
@nowhereman865610 ай бұрын
LOVED this film when I was a kid in the 70's and it aired on regular TV. Younger people today might have a hard time understanding (until they get older), but any older pieve has to be remembered with relative differences to today. It doesn't make any sense to make fun of something from the 1970's down while comparing to 2024 standards. This film had a great feel to it and loads of my favorite elements for sci-fi; finding yourself on the run with somebody sharing attraction, against odds but with strange, dangerous but interestingly beautiful surroundings. The lonely beauty of it.... ahh yes. Oh and damn it Jenny Agutter... why do you have to be SO hot?
@Rockhound616510 ай бұрын
I had such a crush on Jenny Agutter. Still do.
@MichaelDuphorne8 ай бұрын
Love your shows, keep the sci fi dork juices flowing! I'm addicted to these behind the story stories. Just FYI, the water fountain in downtown Fort Worth was shut down and paved over about 20 years ago when a group of kids were paying around jumping from stone to stone and one of them fell into the inlet and drowned. A truly sad end to a fantastic landmark.
@edwardlatz115910 ай бұрын
This is great stuff you are putting out , I am hooked .
@davidburroughs224410 ай бұрын
heck, yeah, I had that poster - but, I fell in love with Jenny Agutter
@graemesmith672110 ай бұрын
I think Jenny Agutter had it written into her contract that she had to get naked in every movie she was in. She also got naked in Equus and Walkabout. I suspect Nastassja Kinski had a similar clause in her contract.
@ooneybird2710 ай бұрын
@@graemesmith6721 You forgot An American Werewolf in London, where she played the nurse.
@graemesmith672110 ай бұрын
@@ooneybird27 Oh yes, I had forgotten that!
@stevesipos9 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter is a classic beauty.Thrilled to have found your channel.
@DanielAppleton-lr9eq9 ай бұрын
She could make a shower curtain look like high fashion. A whole lotta people went on to be in Babylon 5.
@Thomas-yr9ln10 ай бұрын
When this was on I actually thought 30 was old lol. Lord what I wouldn't give to be 30 again.
@MoviesMusicMonsters10 ай бұрын
LOL always stay young at heart
@ericmiller560310 ай бұрын
“Logan’s Run” holds a special place in my film-watching history; I love the actors and plot and the diverse locations the movie takes you too. It’s great storytelling, ending with the protagonist’s escape and arrival at Peter Ustinov’s catopolis, which represents an oasis from the dystopian world the first act introduces us too. I have the Marvel Comics series of it, which is also good.
@Andy-zm3lpАй бұрын
I still catch this film whenever it’s on TV, and Jenny Agutter was always a good watch in anything she did!, Great post as always Dan 👍
@georgeclontd498410 ай бұрын
Logans Run is a classic. I wish for a 4K version with a lot of bonus material..
@p.o.99647 ай бұрын
If they had released this in 1977, it would had been lost in the mix to the Star Wars movie. They put it out just in time. I liked this movie and I watched the series as a kid as well.
@timkitchen714110 ай бұрын
Great review, and I'm so glad this film was rated PG, as I was able to see it in the theater at the ripe old age of 14. Let's say Jenny Agutter became a life long favorite!
@ooneybird2710 ай бұрын
Just like Jane Seymour. From Battlestar Galactica to Bond girl. Been hooked ever since.
@timkitchen714110 ай бұрын
@@ooneybird27 And don't forget Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. Another fond childhood memory. 🙂
@davidanderson409110 ай бұрын
I did read somewhere that the death age of 21 was changed to 30 because of the difficulty of getting the right actors to play the parts of such young leads.
@markmiller640210 ай бұрын
He said that
@davidanderson409110 ай бұрын
@@markmiller6402 Yes, he said it was changed, but he didn't give the reason.
@davidbeazley195810 ай бұрын
When I was a kid, Randolph Powell, who played Francis 7 in the tv series, came to my school in New Zealand. One of my teachers was a HAM radio operator and so was Randolph.
@robtorres6 ай бұрын
Jenny Agutter....What a beauty! My teen heart ached.
@MisterBrain10 ай бұрын
There's things about Logan's Run I like (particularly the set design) but, like some other people: * I long believed Box was capturing runners to serve as a food source for people in the city (and that the people controlling the city encouraged runners for this reason). Apparently not. * The ending makes no sense at all Jenny Agutter is jaw-droppingly beautiful in this film.
@jamesbfaber77708 ай бұрын
In 1977 at Riley Hospital in Indianapolis Indiana a 15 year young patient was visited by Dax(?) in his patient room accompanied by two very serious looking suits, with one oddly keeping his hand very near his mouth as that patient and the silver Android carried on a short but memorable conversation. I know because I am, or was, that patient. I never forgot that encounter but always wondered why couldn't it have been Farrah?... but that is the subject of another letter...😊
@Mustang95ism5 ай бұрын
Hey, Dan. Another GREAT retrospective. One point of disagreement. Specifically, the scene in which Francis and Logan are "missing" the runner in the mall. It was pretty obvious to me that they were playing with the runner, basically burning ammo for the fun of it until firing the "Homer," as the kill round was referred to in the novel. Sandmen miss to be cruel. Stormtroopers miss because they are really, really bad shots. 😃
@brucecarter74185 ай бұрын
Agree with Mustang here. Also, the "Gun" was completely redesigned from the one depicted in the books. And then mildly redesigned again from the movie to the series. Same look, but additional capabilities.
@ralphhathaway-coley54604 ай бұрын
Yep, that is how I saw it too. Just another aspect of the hedonistic society, the carousel after all is just a way to kill the 'old people' in a way that is entertaining to the masses, plus the chance to survive to prevent those forced participate from revolting.
@KabobHope10 ай бұрын
I remember watching an evening news report that said that after a long absence sci-fi was coming back to movie theaters, one a month. It began with Logan's Run and ended with Star Wars.