Silent Running, Soilent Green and Logan's Run were the Masterpieces of Sciences Fiction Movies back in these days.....and still are today.
@richardhouvener64236 ай бұрын
Soylent. Watch the film Blade Runner for an eerily accurate picture of our future.
@TheGrumpyGuide6 ай бұрын
'2001 : A Space Odyssey' also needs to be on that list.
@YAMISOOLD20096 ай бұрын
They were very prescient. I think they are still just as relevant as they were when they were made. We are still moving in the wrong direction on many of the fronts brought up by these movies!
@leximatic6 ай бұрын
Soylent Running, Logan's Green, Silent Run.
@leximatic6 ай бұрын
Silent Green, Logan's Running, Soylent Run
@Rob-eg8qc6 ай бұрын
52 years have passed, I hope that one drone is still looking after the gardens pottering about with its watering can and trowel.
@10Kview6 ай бұрын
Robot tending to plants and a forest that no person may ever enjoy.
@TheGrumpyGuide6 ай бұрын
The artwork on that little watering can is what triggers my tears. All I have to do is think about the little robot and his watering can and my eyes begin to well-up. Just like you, I like to think he is still drifting through space, carefully and faithfully completing his routine to maintain the garden. Or, better still, his ship found a planet to land on and the biosphere caused glorious new life to spring up in some distant world, far from the poisonous reach of humans.
@Rob-eg8qc6 ай бұрын
@@TheGrumpyGuide I like that 👍
@yazoosquelch70656 ай бұрын
Curse you! I had to rewatch that scene and now ghosts are cutting invisible onions right under my eyes.
@RadioSilence-r8x5 ай бұрын
In the Sun by Joan Diaz.. theme😢😢😢😢
@jamesgibson35826 ай бұрын
Saw it as a kid in 1972, it changed my life, worked in agriculture and enclosed production systems for almost 40 years.
@j.w.r37306 ай бұрын
Thank you for being someone who gave a damn. Honestly,thank you.
@ttystikkrocks10426 ай бұрын
Same! I just graduated with an HVAC degree at 58, and I'm using it to do enclosed plant production systems!
@charlesroberts36506 ай бұрын
This movie was highly influential in my life and Nurtured my Ecological awareness and care for the Environment . I grow a Vegetable Garden Every Year, ORGANIC.
@MaXG656 ай бұрын
Same here. I went into forestry.
@jamesgibson35826 ай бұрын
@@ttystikkrocks1042 that is great to hear. So much potential for new HVAC design in CEA.
@ripley7t4296 ай бұрын
All these years, I thought I was the only one that this film brought to tears as a man. Glad to know I have plenty of company.
@mike55566 ай бұрын
Nope! When Bruce says “Take good care of the forest, Huey” I am crying like a pussy!
@SA12String6 ай бұрын
More than you know.
@rmerrida6 ай бұрын
Yeah. Anyone with a heart, it's impossible not to cry.
@JamesJoy-yc8vs6 ай бұрын
They're good tears. Manly, sincere tears. To be embraced, celebrated, not hidden. Emergent emotion
@Mach7RadioIntercepts6 ай бұрын
I saw this movie for the first time in the mid 1979s, on TV. Today, I wonder what the hell we are going to tell our grand kids about the lions and elephants.
@AndrewHills-i4q6 ай бұрын
Highly underrated movie. Remember crying my eyes out when the robots died 😢
@unclebob79376 ай бұрын
@proto-geek248 Yes, they did. The surviving'bots held a funeral.
@perry39286 ай бұрын
Wow, that brings me back. Seen it once when it came out. Gonna grab this one. What struck me was the shot of Bruce at the telescope. It appears to be a Celestron nexstar 8se which I have. To own one now at 64 gave me goose bumps. Thanks Dan.
@michaelparks61206 ай бұрын
That is because you have a soul.
@starmnsixty12096 ай бұрын
@@shanechandler3261 These little guys did. 😢
@gorymarty566 ай бұрын
Same
@SaturnCanuck6 ай бұрын
Thanks Dan, “Silent Running” is one of my favourite moves ever. Even today it is hard to imagine this movie being made for only $1 million. A few things though - there WERE only three ships. And a lot of people get this wrong due to some of the dialogue. But what sound like other ships, are actually the names of the individual domes - as seen on Valley Forge that displays what forest types are on her. And I can prove this. When Anderson makes the announcement to recall the ships for commercial service and destroy the domes, he calls out only THREE ships - Berkshire, Sequoia, Valley Forge. Berkshire Sequoia, Valley Forge. If there were other ships, I am certain this important announcement would have called all of the ships. You mentioned lawsuits, and there was one other. When Universal used the footage of the Valley Forge in “Battlestar Galactica”, Douglas Trumball tried to sue Universal, as he didn’t want his work being used without permission in another film (TV Show). However, he was informed that, as they paid the money for the movie, they owned the footage. Just one in a long series of kicks that Hollywood gave to Douglas Trumball (see “Brainstorm”). Oh and the excellent Special Effects were ground-breaking, and for those of us in the know, there were NO travelling and/or bluescreen matts in the movie. They were all done in-camera. And, you mentioned Peter Schickele, but what you didn’t mention is PDQ Bach.
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
They really knew how to stretch a buck back then. Adjusted for inflation it'd be 7.5 million today. Still you're not making much of a movie for just that now.
@michman26 ай бұрын
Bruce Dern had a great sense of humor and timing in this movie. This is one of my all-time favorites. Long live Huey, Dewey and Lewey.
@charlesstein28806 ай бұрын
@@joey_after_midnight "Oh, the pain, the pain!"
@peatmoss44156 ай бұрын
Huey, Dewey, and Louie
@l.scales75166 ай бұрын
@@charlesstein2880What? nononono! lol
@RadioSilence-r8x5 ай бұрын
@@michman2 💔💔💔
@jonimestas96926 ай бұрын
Yes. Yes. Yes. My all time favorite. I am 63 yr thank you for this wonderful narrative I am one of those little robots caring for the plant life. I am still up there caring for life. 😭
@markreed3926 ай бұрын
"It's not A New Hope, it's just Star Wars". You're a man after my own heart.
@lorensims48466 ай бұрын
I tell them about the first time I went to see Star Wars, the movie the kids now call A New Hope.
@rudolphguarnacci1976 ай бұрын
@@lorensims4846 What do they know? Seriously.
@rudolphguarnacci1976 ай бұрын
I appreciated that comment by Dan as well because it's true.
@JustWasted3HoursHere6 ай бұрын
I just call it "Star Wars", too, but there's a logical reason why it got that name. When George Lucas made the first one he didn't know how well it would do and/or if there would ever be any sequels so it was just "Star Wars" with no "Episode IV" or "A New Hope", but once it was a colossal hit it got rereleased in November of that year with those subtitles added to let people know that this is part of a larger story. (Of course we didn't realize that it would take him over 20 years to get to those episodes 1, 2 and 3!)
@hectorlamar8066 ай бұрын
Star Wars was the first three movies for me. After that is was Star Crap.
@regor21026 ай бұрын
I saw the the Groundstar conspiracy and SILENT RUNNING together at the Drive In when they came out in 1972. I was just 9 years old but these films stuck with me. Not really about SILENT RUNNING but when i hear Tuesday Afternoon by The Moody Blues, it all comes back to me. Funny how that is with some things.
@QuorkEx6 ай бұрын
I don't mind admitting that this is one of the films that has me crying like a baby at the end. That was true in the 1970s, and it's still true today.
@rromano1586 ай бұрын
Yep, this was the first ever movie that made me cry when I saw it back in the 70s.
@eg3956 ай бұрын
Yup, who wasn’t in dismay when the robots only found the claw to one of the robots which flew away during the space storm or when Bruce Dern crashes into the robot with that go kart vehicle or when the last robot was in the dome yo drift away forever. Tear jerker moments for sure.
@LesterMoore6 ай бұрын
Like when Old Yeller died.😢😥
@jeremygrayson96626 ай бұрын
Me too. I had to leave the front room to cry elsewhere because I was so upset.
@mike55566 ай бұрын
"Take good care of the forest, Huey" Niagara Falls
@KASH100436 ай бұрын
Whenever I hear the first notes of "Rejoice in the Sun" sung by Joan Baez, I break down in tears. It's not so much for the robots but the entire story line, that humanity could be so stupid as to put the earth in that dire situation. Sad to see that we are moving right along that same path. A movie that I wish everyone could see.
@SusannaSaunders6 ай бұрын
That's one of the saddest things about this move. It was prophetic in so many ways. Profit was King even then but the real shitty stuff hadn't happened yet... This was a warning shot across the bow that again fell into the silence and Greed...
@DeeBlake-d5m4 күн бұрын
Even in the 80s it was the me generation you didn't care about anything but disco and drugs.
@Makeshift_Mulder6 ай бұрын
Joel Hodgson has said many times that his most direct inspiration for creating MST3K was "Silent Running." He has three robots, is trapped in space, has a riff on Dern's jumpsuit.
@nickimontie6 ай бұрын
That's awesome! I love the Bots!
@starmnsixty12096 ай бұрын
Joel Hodgson must have extremely poor taste if SILENT RUNNING only inspired MST3K for him.
@thomasbentley47576 ай бұрын
Some of the interior of the Satellite of Love looks like it was inspired by Silent Running.
@BobGilbert6 ай бұрын
You beat me to this!
@Phaser1x6 ай бұрын
Crow’s arm! Just like the drones. 😂
@CraigShuman5 ай бұрын
My uncle ( Robert Shepherd) worked on Silent Running and many other films with Dykstra with their company called Apogee. Apogee's last movie was Dune, they didn't get any credit for the film since they left the production because the Mob was getting involved. I remember going to the shop and seeing countless boxes of models that they were taking apart to make space ships Valley Forge, Starwars, Battle Star, Space Balls and more. Many of the special effects crew in Apogee formed Industrial Light and Magic. Thanks for taking a look at this, it brings back many childhood memories.
@kellyjeaularson57866 ай бұрын
I was a kid around 9 years old in 1972 when watching this at the outdoor theater. I could not imagine people being so cold, selfish and uncaring to just "blow-up" animals and plants. And the fact that the Earth no longer required nature!? NO! This movie made me cry and be angry. I never became a tree hugger. I do my best, however, to protect nature at every stage of my day to day life. All because of this movie!
@gnericgnome42146 ай бұрын
then the film was successful. Because basically it's just propaganda. Hilariously ridiculous propaganda. Even at 10 I had to question pretty much everything about it.
@jamescarter31966 ай бұрын
@@gnericgnome4214 That's such a sad-sack bonehead take, it's just a frigging simple family film with a heavy-handed moral of the story, and you're getting all goofy about 'wull propaganda bad, me so mad at propaganda'. You boneheads just freak out on every rare occasion that you notice a hint of subtext of any kind, and then you screech a bunch of laughable bullshit because you think you're brilliant for noticing something obvious.
@zevroth13616 ай бұрын
In hindsight the premise that an expert in botany and ecology couldn't figure out the reason the trees were dying was lack of sunlight is kinda ridiculous
@captainape68076 ай бұрын
@@gnericgnome4214 Yes, but in my opinion this film is promoting Conservation which is good not the Climate Change nonsensical propaganda. I like forests, trees, lakes, animals etc and most people do. For instance, if you have a passion for hunting, you'll need forests, for fishing you need clean bodies of water. Unfortunately, these concerns have been taken over by a corrupt environmental lobby, which pushes an agenda to control every aspect of our lives. However, I do relate to your concerns regarding propaganda. This comment is intended as friendly and conversational and not an attack on your viewpoint. I suppose I quite liked the movie and am therefore warm towards it.
@jjcastaldo41256 ай бұрын
Kelly, you don't have to be a tree hugger to be conscientious, as you are. We're around the same age. When I was in seventh grade, I first heard the term "Stewardship of the Earth" from one of my teachers, a Nun. It was during religion class. A simple lesson I have always kept in mind.
@jstnxprsn6 ай бұрын
As I mentioned in your promo for this, I know a LOT about this film, more than all but a few, so you had a high bar to impress me. Happy to say, you did a great job and covered most of the important stuff. You could definitely dived deeper into the Odyssey carts and his father making those. Several good details on that could have been added here, like the transmission issues and how they solved them. The best part which you left out though was the giant FREEZING COLD tank of water where Dern had to shoot his bathing scene. That was pretty interesting and hilarious. As I recall that was brought up in the commentary track along with many other fascinating details. Overall, you did a super job with this and even covered a couple of minor things I didn't know about, like what happened with the some of the props. Thanks, Dan.
@bobacrey10686 ай бұрын
I'm a 55 year old man and I rarely get through this film without crying
@SmokingJacket6 ай бұрын
Totally understand.The same thing happens to me.
@datasilouk19956 ай бұрын
Same here, 59 years old man, and I just can not stop crying either. I think this is the only film that does that.
@sdcoinshooter6 ай бұрын
Don’t feel bad, 63 here and exactly the same.
@richardyon22456 ай бұрын
You too heh? One of the saddest endings of any film. Even though it tries to be upbeat about the last drone left all alone to tend the the last remaining bio dome... Its ok😢 , Im fine😢😢 ... Ive just got something in my eye. 😢😢😢
@maddog466 ай бұрын
You would have thought that Micheal Landon would have wrote it.
@HerrEllsworth6 ай бұрын
The early 70s were such an inventive time for innovative filmmakers. It's a shame those conditions don't exist anymore.
@greggstrasser57916 ай бұрын
Corporations and "property rights." These people are killing us.
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
Investors are risk adverse today. Movies cost more. A million dollars wouldn't cover the catering bill.
@RaptorFromWeegee6 ай бұрын
As a kid, back in the 70s, I used to earnestly await the arrival of the NY Times Sunday papers "Arts & Leisure" section. It always had big splashy ad's of all the new movies coming out that week. I was so impressionable. Vividly remember seeing the first print ads for Star Wars. Nobody knew anything about it. I vaguely though, "Hmm, that looks kind of cool". Saw it, a few months later, at summer camp.
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
@@RaptorFromWeegee Star Wars was a huge phenomenon. The world went crazy for it. There's before Star Wars and after Star Wars. It altered the world permanently. To this very day the effects echo through time. Everyone certainly knows about Star Wars now. I read somewhere that Jedi is the biggest religion in Australia. Although with recent lore revelations I suspect that has changed.
@RaptorFromWeegee6 ай бұрын
@@1pcfred I get that it got huge. But no one foresaw that when it first came out. The first movie review I saw of it on TV news pegged it as a Space Western. Nothing phenomenal, just a really fun harmless movie. At summer camp the older kids talked about it like crazy. Later in the fall, all the toys and merch came out.
@timfankell42426 ай бұрын
Saw it for the first time in 1983 when it aired on TBS and fell in love. The first science-fiction movie that broke my heart.
@jonathanswift22515 ай бұрын
I saw it network tv a year after I saw Starlost. After he named the little robots Huey, Luey, and Duey I was emotionally invested. As the movie ended, I cried. I was 7 yrs old.
@lkmh32236 ай бұрын
This film has always been on my top ten, and Im 60yrs old, seen the best and the worest, and it is still at the top. Its perfect for awhole lot of reasons, and not a lot of reasons. If I ever wrote and directed a film.... it would look like this. AND YES IT STILL MAKES ME CRY.
@johnkennedy55286 ай бұрын
Drones conspire to fleece him at cards: those cheeky messages from tapping feet. Wonderful. John K, UK.
@donaldfinch14116 ай бұрын
Us old hippies still weep at the mention of the title. An amazing performance from Dern. Rejoice In The Sun is iconic Joan.
@KRAFTWERK2K66 ай бұрын
Joan Baez's voice is beautiful and fits that beautiful lady so well
@ARGONUAT6 ай бұрын
I first saw this movie on the road in a La Quinta hotel in the middle of nowhere. It deeply affected me. It sounds like it has deeply affected a lot of people over the years!
@nemmie6 ай бұрын
I love this film. I haven't seen it for many years though. I remember seeing it as a kid in the 70s and just bawling my eyes out at the end. The loneliness of that little drone at the end watering the plants. I wanted to hug it so bad.
@rmerrida6 ай бұрын
Yeah, just thinking about it... Oh...got...something in...my eye...
@sside86 ай бұрын
I haven’t seen this movie since I was a kid. From what I remember, it had a sad ending where Bruce Dern’s character dies and one of the robots is left by itself watering the plants.
@rickytoddbotelho95556 ай бұрын
Coincidentally, Donald Sutherland died today ,I know he wasn't in silent running, but he and Bruce dern have been close to my heart for being in sci Fi movies since I was a kid.❤😂 Great job 👍
@kvmoore16 ай бұрын
Awah, man. I'm shocked to read this. I remember Donald from the movie "Virus" released in 1999. He was such a good actor and I'm sad to read he is gone. R.I.P.
@l.scales75166 ай бұрын
omg, another one,5 days ago! damn, I know its life but just now they seem to be dropping like flies!
@stevekillgore92722 ай бұрын
Donald was I think a giant in the craft.
@rondias66256 ай бұрын
Was 12yrs old and Silent Running was and still is one of my favorite movies..thanks so much for going over this movie and what happened to the props etc..
@fshepinc6 ай бұрын
The score of Silent Running was composed by Peter Schickele (pronounced SHIK-uh-lee) who was also famous for his legendary creation, P.D.Q. Bach. He won four consecutive Grammy awards for best comedy album. Professor Schickele died in January of 2024. The man was a legend!
@donchoq6 ай бұрын
One of the few Joan Baez songs I can stomach!
@flukedogwalker30166 ай бұрын
Damn, I didn't know. I especially liked his WOOF, Hoople album and his song"Herr Kentuckian Oberst" sung in Germanic opera style. This man was a true genius. He had more albums than Martin Mull though Martin 's "I'm Flexible" song was hilarious. "I used to be plastic, but now I'm elastic, be flexible. " 😂😂
@bradrainwater80563 ай бұрын
I just bought this movie online… I had it on VHS but that was a long time ago. As a movie collector this is one of my favorites to own! Shine on!
@Rippypoo6 ай бұрын
Silent Running is one of my all-time FAVORITE films. I saw it when it was first released. Two gorgeous Joan Baez songs in the middle of a science fiction film. Who knew?
@OhAncientOne6 ай бұрын
I was never a big fan of Joan Baez, just not my kind of music. (I like Jethro Tull Aqualung or locomotive breath) But I got to see her when she opened for Bob Dylan in Orlando, back in the '70s. And I can tell you after 70+ concerts she stand's above everyone with her presence. She had an instant astonishing effect on the entire crowd like I have never seen. I can still remember that it happened with her first sentence.
@Rippypoo6 ай бұрын
@@OhAncientOne It's great that you got to experience that. The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down. I love that song.
@TheGrumpyGuide6 ай бұрын
@@OhAncientOne WTF???!!!!! JETHRO TULL ARE GREAT!!!!! Have you even listened to the albums 'Stormwatch', 'Crest of a Knave' or 'Broadsword and The Beast'????!!
@OhAncientOne6 ай бұрын
@@TheGrumpyGuide You took what I said completely wrong. Jethro Tull IS what I listen to rather than Baez. I drove 1,400mi to see them for the 5th time at Tampa Stadium, July 1976. Best concert I've ever seen, and I have verified over 70 concerts on my spreadsheet list. Just search Jethro Tull Tampa '76. There's a 1hr 23min video from the concert I was at.
@TheGrumpyGuide6 ай бұрын
@@OhAncientOne No need for me to google anything. I love Jethro Tull. You should edit your original comment as it reads like you're alikening Tull to Baez.
@joelance85826 ай бұрын
The Star Lost, a Canadian TV Show, produced by Douglas Trumbull, also released in early 70's had a starship very similar to the ones used in this film.
@tedwatson17436 ай бұрын
If I could have one prop from any movie I have ever seen, it would be the watering can from this movie. It holds a special place in my heart.
@dukecraig24026 ай бұрын
Seriously, Han Solo's blaster he fried Greedo with, John Wayne's big loop lever action from Stagecoach, Schwarzenegger's sword from Conan, Rick Deckard's Voit Kampff machine to test for Replicant's in Blade Runner, Jim Rockford's gold Firebird and countless other iconic props and you'd pick a watering can from Silent Running? Wow, and people say I'm screwed up.
@matthewdavies20576 ай бұрын
@@dukecraig2402 With the little flowers on it. I'll take one too!
@lkmh32236 ай бұрын
YES.... I would too. anybody who says otherwise must not know this film.
@daleburrell62736 ай бұрын
@@dukecraig2402...WE'LL HAVE TO TAKE YOUR WORD FOR IT...(!)
@dwbunloaf82456 ай бұрын
That moment sets me off every time 🥹🥺
@prokesuk6 ай бұрын
It may not be by name, but WALL-E was definitely a reimagining of Silent Running.
@MoviesMusicMonsters6 ай бұрын
I never thought about that but yes you're probably right :-)
@KRAFTWERK2K66 ай бұрын
Oh yeah Wall-E had several inspirations. Including Johnny Five of "Short Circuit" but the drones of this movie were also part of the inspiration :)
@prokesuk6 ай бұрын
@@KRAFTWERK2K6 It's not just the drones, though. In Silent Running the world is barren and the people live in enclosed cities. The only life is up in the domes out in space and a drone is left to take care of the last of it as the dome drifts off into space. With Wall-E they flipped some of this around. The Earth is barren and basically a trash heap. The people live out in space and a robot is sent to search for life on Earth. A robot then becomes the caretaker of the plant in the boot.
@mikeb73796 ай бұрын
Was going to say same thing that WALL E was very much a re imaging of this brilliant film. Therefore WALL E was also a great film. Both made me cry.
@video99couk6 ай бұрын
And WALL-E was a fan of Beta too. (Fun fact: The animators made a mistake in WALL-E, what was clearly meant to be a domestic Betamax tape was actually a professional BetacamSP tape, which was probably what the animators had to hand and they didn't know the difference.)
@Wolfinger19356 ай бұрын
I think it is important to recognize that composer Peter Schickele, Professor of Music Pathology at the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople, was the brilliant comedic (and musical) mastermind behind the P.D.Q. Bach mythos. Through the 70s, we attended many of his Christmas concerts at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln center. He would make his entrance by swinging on a rope from the balcony or zip lining to his conductor's stand. Silent Running was one of a small handful of films he wrote music for, and certainly the most well known. For those who have never experienced P.D.Q. Bach... it is definitely worth a listen. Dan... you should do a "Music" episode on this guy. He was a genius.
@markfellhauer3526 ай бұрын
I saw P.D.Q. Bach in Toledo, OH at the Masonic Auditorium around 1980. What a hoot.
@jjcastaldo41256 ай бұрын
I must admit, there was a time I listened to NPR, mostly for Garrison Keillor. I do remeber hearing Schickele Mix. Very informative and entertaining. I remeber his sign offs: He quoted someone, Duke Ellington I think, "If it sounds good, it is goo." He also said, " It just don't mean a think if it ain't got certain je ne sais quoi."
@phila38846 ай бұрын
Saw it on network TV in the 70s. It blew my teenage mind. I became aware of the actor Bruce Dern through that movie.
@hamilde6 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more, it was "Star Wars", not "A New Hope". I guess that means I'm old. I was 17 when Star Wars came out.
@playedout1486 ай бұрын
Nick The Lounge Singer never mentioned, "A New Hope" in his rendition of The Star Wars theme. That's good enough for me.
@BilTheGalacticHero6 ай бұрын
I was 7 when Star Wars came out. My daughter and I argue about "A New Hope" all the time. LOL.
@garfieldsmith3326 ай бұрын
There are only three Star Wars movies. And they should not be numbered as IV, V, VI; in fact no numbering at all.
@Instantphojo6 ай бұрын
Me too!! I was 17 when my friends and I watched it in the theater! Best times!!
@darransykes34066 ай бұрын
the movie only became A New Hope during the 1997 re release here in the UK
@XY_Dude6 ай бұрын
saw this when it first came out. Very unique. Loved Joan's music. Misted up at the end with the loving care of the forest and her solo. Gonna buy the DVD
@Litauen-yg9ut6 ай бұрын
A favourite as a kid. Loved Huey, Dewie and Louie... And as I got older, the message behind the movie did make sense... Bruce Dern always made a great quirky character.
@Euthymia2 ай бұрын
Wow, it's hard to believe that Bruce Dern was so far down the list of actors chosen to play Freeman. He captures so perfectly the sort of over-earnest 20-something eco-hippie Sierra Club dude that I remember as YMCA camp counselors from that time period (one of them actually was a card-carrying Sierra Club member). Seemed like every Summer camp had one, you could tell that even the other counselors thought they were a bit odd. They were kinda lukewarm on stuff like tug-of-war, but when we'd do hiking or nature study they were in their element. The wide-eyed look, the mannerisms, the woo-woo voice, he just nails it. I'm sure he had examples among his friend group; His daughter Laura would have been 5 years old at the time, so maybe she had a Montessori School teacher or two to provide the model. Watched it for the first time at a drive-in theater with my parents in Dana Pt. CA. One thing that always struck me as odd was that Lowell seemed to be the only astronaut on the mission who wasn't overcome with joy that they were going to blow the domes and go home. Was he the only granola person who managed to make it through the training program? Maybe it was a political thing, the mission was always going to end that way and the food-producing corporations that no doubt were responsible for getting rid of all natural plant life rigged it. Couldn't have too many loose cannons like Lowell out there.
@renaissancepoet6 ай бұрын
Tearjerker of a film. Sci-fi movies usually don't do that.
@jjcastaldo41256 ай бұрын
It was a great drama as well as a Sci-Fi flick. Realistically, you probably would have appreciated the story no matter where it was set.
@bignishspcinsights17626 ай бұрын
Love your work, Dan. I remember reading somewhere that the special effects for Saturn used in Silent Running were originally made for 2001: A Space Odyssey. Saturn was the original destination of Discovery 1 as per the book. However at some stage in it's production, the destination was changed from Saturn to Jupiter, hence the Saturn effects were now surplus to requirements and ultimately were able to be used in Silent Running.
@Feargal-nn7nd6 ай бұрын
I believe it was because the saturn effects were too complex for 2001 which raises the question of how they could be ok for a budget film...maybe trumbull figured it out between jupiter and Saturn, so to speak!
@johnlundquist58916 ай бұрын
Footage of the Valley Forge was also used in the Battlestar Galactica remake mini-series where the president is talking to a little girl just prior the cylons showing up.
@Nowhereman106 ай бұрын
I did get to see one of the surviving domes that was touring the country in the 1970s at a sci-fi convention. You don't really appreciate how much thought, work, and detailing went into them, even though you can only get glimpses of their insides in the movie. Also in the same con exhibition was the Drone 2 Huey prop/outfit, complete with the articulate arm set up so that it was deployed out and holding a winning hand of cards, just like in the movie!
@AJeepADroneAndAnOldMan6 ай бұрын
I loved that movie, Bruce Dern was excellent
@Ancientreapers6 ай бұрын
15:39 There was this series titled The Starlost starring Keir Dullea and I do believe those Dome designs were also used for the ship in that series. There were about two dozen domes and each dome had evolved its own human culture. The series aired about a year after this movie. Edit: Oh yeah forgot that show was also Trumbull''s.
@davidchristensen69086 ай бұрын
I will always see these 3 robots watering plant on their long journey to somewhere. It’s a wonderful film. Thank you for this episode.
@camo_for_cocktails6 ай бұрын
But only one survived.😢
@paulfogarty77244 ай бұрын
Beautiful sci fi movie. Funny though, Bruce Dern still sounded more like a poker - playing cowboy than an astronaut 😅 The music was really one of the most beautiful soundtracks ever created for any movie.
@FrankJCarver6 ай бұрын
Bruce Dern said this was his most favourite movie he worked on. He also said he was a big science fiction fan and would have loved to have appeared in Star Wars, which was another movie he liked.
@ronschlorff70896 ай бұрын
Check him out in the "Outer Limits" tv show episode the "Zanti Misfits", 1963. He must have been about 24 in that episode, great one it is indeed, and may have launched his career! ;D
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
Bruce Dern would be in anything. I doubt the guy ever said no. Want to be in the movie Bruce, Sure! But we haven't even told you what it's about yet. Don't care.
@Fischbone1586 ай бұрын
In regards to kit bashing to make the large models there is a couple of examples from 8:52 - 8:55. In the tower like structure under the large antenna array in upper-right hand are 4 doors/hatches that one would find on the turret of a German Panzer III or IV tank from WWII. In the lower left-hand corner are 6 circular units that one could find on the engine grill plates where exhaust cooling fan were used on the engines of Tiger and Panther tanks. In SW one can also find the whole engine grill plates being used on models of the Star Destroyers and a couple spots on the Millenium Falcon. 🐯
@Rippypoo6 ай бұрын
I own a DVD copy of this film. Special features are great. Especially an entire documentary made about the filming. Fascinating.
@x15galmichelleevans6 ай бұрын
A later Blu-Ray was also released, and a couple of years ago a new 2K restoration was done, which is really superb.
@Thruster53Ай бұрын
Here's a thought for sequel. The spaceship and crew on the USS Palomino from the movie The Black hole. Is wondering though space running out of resources Encounter the Valley Forge. Go from there
@paulaburrows86606 ай бұрын
I first watched this on TV when a was a too young to properly understand it. I do remember crying at the end when the droid was left alone at the end 😔
@thetowerstillstands6 ай бұрын
Loved it since I saw it at 15 in '81. Message was ignored then and many STILL want to ignore it. No streaming platform is playing it. I got the DVD so I would never be without it.✌️
@michaelparks61206 ай бұрын
This film actually made me cry as a child....I am pretty sure it still would.
@bharnden77596 ай бұрын
Take good care of the forest Dewey!
@MaddMango6 ай бұрын
So glad you covered this movie. I watched it as a pre-teen on TV, always stuck with me. And yes, always just "Star Wars."
@Jon64296 ай бұрын
Many moons ago our first server farm was run by three iMac G3's rescued from a dumpster. They were instantly dubbed Hewy, Dewy and Lewy for obvious reasons. This however lead to some awkward conversations with authorities on account of us calling them "the kids". When a nosy neighbor heard me say the kids will be fine locked in the garage for a week while we go on holiday all hell broke loose.
@peterwhitman55756 ай бұрын
Dan, one problem with your vlogs, they always leave me not wanting more but needing more. Your vlogs are so thorough and complete your answering questions I didn't even think of asking. Thank you for all your research and effort and of course the time that must go into each and every one. YOU ROCK IT BROTHER!!
@donchoq6 ай бұрын
Great Soundtrack! Loved Huey, Dewey, and ill fated Louie! Saw it in the theater in 1972. The theater manager gave me the movie poster when the films run ended. I still have it (framed of course)!
@luvtruckin6 ай бұрын
Absolutely one of my favorite SCI FI movies from my childhood. The way they made the robots seem to have human characteristics was spot on. Wow I never noticed the big corporate names unless it was subconscious but I was a kid. Wow how cool to know how the robots were set up that never occurred to me as a kid.
@Kirok20056 ай бұрын
I LOVED this! And I loved the movie when it came out. I think I saw it in 1973 or 1974, when I was 8-9 years old, and then a few times in the 80's and 90's. First time was the Saturday matinee at the Little Rock Air Force Base (Arkansas) base theater. Started at noon. Kids got in for 25 cents. I still remember crying so hard! Heartbreaking and poignant. Bruce Dern was great, and my heart was with him. I love the poker scene!! The little robots hissing, haha. Thanks Dan -- for the awesome research (I know it's gotta take a lot of time!), and for continuing to bring back simpler times in life.
@PrivateIvan6 ай бұрын
Great retrospective on a movie I've loved since I saw it in 1973 (on an airplane, so crying over the robots was weird, but then soon every kid on the plane was crying).
@MerelyGifted6 ай бұрын
The adults just hid their tears well.
@daplace9025 ай бұрын
Dan - Recently discovered your site here. I gotta tell you - I am Really LOVING IT ! In the several episodes I have watched so far you have really been doing a fine job in all aspects of the show. And Kudos on your research. Watched the Starlog episode & Loved it. I am much older than you - I have several boxes of all the early issues & one of these days I will get down there to my back room & go through everything. I will let you know what I find. Keep up the fine work. You are really getting better & better all the time.
@MoviesMusicMonsters5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your kind words and support! I'm thrilled to hear that you're enjoying the channel. It's fantastic that you have those early issues - I'd love to hear about what you find when you go through them. Cheers, Dan
@jeffbranch80726 ай бұрын
As a kid I saw 'Silent Running' on TV, about mid-to-late '70's. A buddy of mine was the only other one in our group of friends that saw it and knows about the movie at all. I found a copy on DVD in a bargain bin for 2 or 3 dollars and grabbed it. Movies like this, 'Blade Runner', 'THX-1138', and others stand on their own, and are not movies that ever need to be remade. And if they do, I simply won't watch it.
@kc54026 ай бұрын
Jeff, do you have any opinion on the political whitewashing of the movie "The Day The Earth Stood Still"? Michael Rennie's 1951 version was superb for its day, with an interesting mix of adventure, suspense and politics. But the later remake (with Keanu Reeves as one of its 'victims') had most of the political stuff completely rewritten to reflect American corporate and military culture. I still haven't added the 1951 version to my movie collection, I keep meaning to try to find it but I never seem to get around to it.
@markb78986 ай бұрын
Thanks Dan, is certainly one of my favourite classic sci-fi films. The Jone Baez rejoice in the sun was a haunting song in the film still gives me goose bumps today when I hear if. Given the mess we are making of our environment today the film has even more significance.
@johnmoniz24786 ай бұрын
What was really interesting with the drone costumes is that if you pay attention, you will see that the costumes were made to the actors, and each drone costume is different not only in color, but also size. How cool is that 😊
@michaelparks61206 ай бұрын
This is just how AI wants you to feel....you dopes
@hotpotato40276 ай бұрын
Yep, AI attracts _ALL_ ⬆️the dopes interested in the making of these now classic films.
@GillRockatansky6 ай бұрын
@@michaelparks6120What the hell are you talking about?
@jonnyjackson60506 ай бұрын
@@michaelparks6120what does AI have to do with a film made in the 70's?
@kefhomepage6 ай бұрын
@@michaelparks6120This has nothing to do with Ai . What planet are you on😳
@fractalelf77606 ай бұрын
I need to sit down and watch this again. IIRC this was going to be redone sometime soon but not sure the project got off the ground. Saw it when I was maybe nine, still recall watching it and being mesmerized as a child. Left a big impact on me always as it showed that science fiction could also have “heart”.
@lorensims48466 ай бұрын
This has always been on of my very favorite movies. A few years earlier my dad, who worked in the film department at the university, took me to see 2001: A Space Odyssey. This greatly increased my interest in science fiction but also in special effects. I got to see Silent Running after a couple of years researching everything II could about 2001. That's where I recognized Douglas Trumbull from and I got to know John Dykstra from this movie. I think the first copy of Cinefex I got gave me a ton of detail about the production of Silent Running. I also became a huge Bruce Dern fan after this. OF COURSE we all knew about Laura Dern. She's pretty great too. I think the process of cannibalizing bits of styrene model kits started with the models used in 2001. It's a great way to give more detail to supposedly large surfaces in close-up. I was also familiar with the brand names showing up everywhere from 2001. This just gave Silent Running street cred. I saw this as at least the emotional followup to 2001. This time with a '70s environmental angle. It's clear in the movie that they were having trouble with the hydraulic arms of the droids, I mean drones. They were an entirely new charming kind of screen robot. For the very first time, not threatening at all. The props I was most interested in at the time were the polyhedral shipping containers with all the different logos on them. But a lot of them didn't even survive those go-carts during shooting. I guess it would be like looking for specific set rock props on Star Trek. Star Wars made such an impression by giving a a science fiction world that looked "lived in," but compared to 2001, Silent Running did it first. I really appreciated the aircraft carrier setting for this movie since these ships were supposed to be the far future version of much the same thing. I really had no idea it was a low budget production. They clearly put every penny right out there on the screen where we could see it. The drones working outside the ship looked just great. Those forest domes looked just great, even their personal quarters, the hangar bay/freight warehouse, and the control room all looked really great. This is my holy trinity of EXCELLENT special effects: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Silent Running, and Star Wars. Few other movies from the time even compare, though the original Battelstar Galactica really tried. The look of the models is relatively consistent and their use is superb each time. Of course, George Lucas was doing something completely new that kept me going back to watch that movie twenty two times that summer the way we all were then.
@stephenoran20196 ай бұрын
I am pretty sure this is my favorite movie of all time. I don't know why, I just love it. Thanks for this presentation - it was remarkable!
@Illini586 ай бұрын
Remember watching in a small theater in my hometown when it came out. Thanks again for going to memory lane 😅
@jonnywyattgreengreen33016 ай бұрын
So cool video Dan .it's always been a movie l have enjoyed and makes me cry at the end ,There's real message behind it in the 70s don't let Earth happen like this . Those 1970s before Star wars were classic social comment and love them . I know which episode Battlestar galactica using shock footage from War of the Gods .Only because l saw it last night . Those robots always have special place I n my heart. 😎
@mikedignum18686 ай бұрын
Such a sad story...always made me tear up.
@redraven41776 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your presentation of the great SiFi films I'm 73 and still enjoy rewatching the great ones. The very first movie I ever saw was Forbidden Planet I was 5 years old and saw the poster of Robby as I was with my mother shopping as we past a theater. She allowed me to see it When I got home I told my sister who was 13 all about it. My mouth wouldn't stop running at the dinner table. My sister turned to my Fad and asked if he would give us a ride back to the theater so she could see it. So I got to see it a second time on thevsame day Been hooked on SciFi ever since. Bright Blessings and be well.
@MsDeenaBlue6 ай бұрын
One of my all time favorite movie. I showed it at my Navy base on a reel movie projector. As with many others, the ending made me cry.
@Hamish19686 ай бұрын
An absolute favourite of mine, even if it’s nearly as old as me. Watch it again Dan, it opens up with every rewatch. Thanks for the deep dive, looking forward to the next one.
@benefitthirteen6 ай бұрын
Went on a school outing in 1972 to see a showing of 1968's "Romeo and Juliet". They were having an issue with the projector so to keep us for becoming unruly, they fired up "Silent Running" (which was showing at theater). We made it about 15 minutes into the film before they ripped it away to start "Romeo and Juliet" (though an excellent movie). I still bear the scars. Of course I went back to see it.
@higgs9236 ай бұрын
Bruce Dern's performance as someone who remained heads up and kept his sense of humor in the face of the inevitable resonated with me in 1972 and still moves me now. When the movie came out I was freshly returned from my tour with the USN's Brown Water Navy in the Mekong Delta. And I wept at the end of both of them.
@SolitaryWolf6 ай бұрын
I have always loved this movie since 1972. It resonates with me. It was groundbreaking in the years before Star Wars. Bruce Dern carries that whole movie by himself. And least we not forget the Joan Baez song. Pure Heaven.
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
There were only what 4 actors in the whole movie. Besides the robots. They were on a ship in deep space. So kinda isolated. The other crew members were basically cast as the heels.
@pwc74755 ай бұрын
Excellent! i remember seeing this movie when i was 10 and thinking Bruce was the bad guy. 50 years later he did the right thing. Classic movie and for a man who's parents where probably not even born in 72 you where spot on. PS can you send me the lost in space robot, i will pay for shipping.
@Whatt787Ай бұрын
Agree, Bruce Dren killing his fellow astronauts was totally understandable, if only because they were total lowlifes
@renardfranse6 ай бұрын
I am so glad that there are SO many fans here AND positive comments. I have tried to give my knowledge of this movies where I can to all of you.
@Hoplophile14 ай бұрын
Great review, and brought back a lot of great memories. I saw this when I was in high school when it was released and it made a huge impact on me. I had no idea that Peter Schickele (a.k.a. P.D.Q. Bach) wrote the soundtrack -- that only makes me love it more as I was (and am) a huge fan. A friend of mine at the time and I wrote and recorded a respectful, almost full length audio parody called "Silenced Punning": now Screwy, Chewy and Phooey are all lost to antiquity.
@JohnWilsonComicsGuy6 ай бұрын
And Laura Dern's mother is Academy-nominated and Golden Globe and BAFTA-winning actress Diane Ladd. Known for multiple films and TV shows including Chinatown, Rambling Rose, and Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore.
@greggstrasser57916 ай бұрын
They are ALL related.
@figmojustfigmo38206 ай бұрын
Diane is no relation to Alan Ladd. However, her mother (Laura’s grandmother) was an actress.
@voicetube5 ай бұрын
This is great; one of my favorite films of all time, actually! Start in the theater I think at least twice when I was a teenager. As a side note, this guy narrating this video has a great voice, yet if he were to speed up by about 30% and be a little more subtle with his delivery, he would be perfecto. (I eventually had to speed this up to 1.25 on KZbin, to watch :-)
@josephmckinney96606 ай бұрын
I have been looking forward to this episode. Thanks! I remember seeing Silent Running on TV in the early 1970’s when I was around 10 years old. This movie has always been a favorite. It is simultaneously breathtaking and tragic. I cried at the end also. This is one of those science fiction movies like Forbidden Planet and 2001 that was foundational for so much of what came afterwards. Yes, Huey, Dewey and Louie were the original astromech droids.
@brianhanson93676 ай бұрын
Saw it in the theater when it came out. Great flick. Another forgotten one ‘A boy and his dog’ Starred don johnson when a kid.
@michaelwetzlich1596 ай бұрын
One of my favorite Pre Star Wars Sci-Fi movies. I loved it because I had to use my imagination to fill in a lot of the plot gaps which was fine. Fast forward to the 1990s I was on Active Duty in the Navy serving aboard USS Valley Forge CG-50, sadly there were never any references to the film anywhere aboard the ship and she was a target in a live fire Missile Exercise and is now a man made reef laying on the bottom of the ocean floor. The curse of ships bearing the name Valley Forge!
@1pcfred6 ай бұрын
From what I've heard the original Valley Forge was no picnic either.
@ericplatt68842 ай бұрын
When I saw you covered this film I clicked on it without hesitation. This flick affected me deeply, and the music sung by Jian Baez was haunting. I felt Bruce Dern was perfect for the part (and for The Zante Misfits haha). Thanks for this deep dive! Much appreciated.
@QuorkEx6 ай бұрын
The films soundtrack was released on a coloured vinyl LP in the 1970s. Green vinyl of course 🙂
@hungadunga5236 ай бұрын
YES! I bought it brand new, and it's still in my LP collection. Joan Baez singing "Rejoice In The Sun"is pure beauty.
@thelosthippie19696 ай бұрын
@@hungadunga523 Still have my copy. Got to interview Joan Baez in the 90's and we talked about her experience with Silent Running.
@nagleedmv6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for doing a video on Silent Running. I had seen it on TV as a kid once, but no one I ever talked to about movies had ever seen it. This had lots of good information about the movie, and now I will have to get the 4K Blu-ray to see it again.
@hobbyfarmer626 ай бұрын
In a way there were things like the cargo boxes that lent themselves to advertising so well. And Dern has always had a knack for being great at the odd balls and slightly strange characters his entire career.
@Starshipsforever6 ай бұрын
I don't mind that sort of thing so much when it's done in a reasonable, in-universe way where you'd expect company logos to be. Sometimes it doesn't age well, since a lot of companies get bought out, merge, or go out of business. The ur example of this being the Pan Am company whose logo was on the Orion spaceplane and seen throughout the space station.
@sdcoinshooter6 ай бұрын
Underrated in my opinion and holds a special place in my heart. I was 11 in 72, my mom was in the hospital for a minor surgery and my dad took me to see this film. Thanks Dad.
@jrhalabamacustoms56736 ай бұрын
Standing ovation! Wonderful movie. I too hope the robot trio are out there tending gardens.
@starmnsixty12096 ай бұрын
Just one of them, sadly.
@MADhouseTelephone5 ай бұрын
I seem to remember watching an independent film online that used drones from this movie or ones that were very similar. They were doing maintenance and household chores around a large mansion, including bringing trays of food and placing them near a large easy chair in the center room and taking them away later with the food untouched. Eventually the camera moved around so you could see the sole Human occupant of the house who had apparently died years before and was just a mummified corpse sitting in the chair. I would love to find that film again.
@Jessesmall6 ай бұрын
Being an LA kid, I knew "adults" growing up that worked on this. Had the plastic toys as a youngling. 🎉🎉🎉
@kenhicks85246 ай бұрын
The robot tapping his foot while waiting is classic.
@brianpreston35096 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for this episode, nicely done Dan! Thank you for the deep dive.
@MoviesMusicMonsters6 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@Hogger3014 ай бұрын
An amazingly forward thinking story line. Just turned 50 myself, and this movie at a young age was added to my long list of films that were etched into my life.
@lancebbowman6 ай бұрын
This video arrived just in time to occupy me while I wait to be discharged from the hospital! Thanks, Dan!
@Getpojke6 ай бұрын
First saw Silent Running around the same time John Denver did that concert in the large biodome at Seven Springs Center in Haywood County. I was pretty young & thought the future was going to be like that. For years none of my friends had seen the film, but it stuck hard on my mind. Still one of my favourite pieces of sci-fi. I rewatch it every couple of years & it still stands up as a great film.