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The Andromeda Strain

 
Movies:

The Andromeda Strain

  • Director: Robert Wise
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Disaster Film, Paranoid Thriller
  • Themes: Plagues and Epidemics, Finding the Cure, Race Against Time
  • Main Cast: Arthur Hill, David Wayne, James Olson, Kate Reid, Paula Kelly
  • Release Year: 1971
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 127 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

The "Andromeda Strain" is a deadly extraterrestrial virus. It is brought to Earth when a research satellite crashes near a tiny Arizona town. Everyone in the community dies within days, except for a baby and an "insulated" drunkard. Recruited from labs all over North America, doctors Charles Dutton (David Wayne), Jeremy Stone (Arthur Hill), Ruth Leavitt (Kate Reid), and Mark Hall (James Olson) don radiation suits and race against time to isolate and destroy the virus. The film is based on a novel by Michael Crichton. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Based on the novel by best-selling science fiction alarmist Michael Crichton, The Andromeda Strain combines nuclear fears with space-age technophobia and early-'70s paranoia. Though the action occasionally flags, director Robert Wise documents a diverse group of scientists' efforts to identify a mysterious killer organism and vanquish it with clinical precision, making the most of split-screen editing to show the complexity of the work and ratchet up the suspense. Mostly shot on an elaborate set with a cast of unknowns, The Andromeda Strain also showcases the power and allure of technology, reaching a visually trippy climax as a young doctor scales the core of the multi-level, underground "Wildfire" lab and dodges lasers to avert a nuclear holocaust. One of the period's many dire cautionary tales about the perils of overreaching and the potential nefarious motives of the government, The Andromeda Strain still earned attention for its sleek look, garnering Oscar nominations for art direction and editing. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

George Mitchell - Jackson; Ramon Bieri - Maj. Manchek; Walter Brooke - Corpse in water (uncredited); Richard Bull; Eric Christmas - Senator from Vermont; Joe di Reda; Peter Helm; Peter Hobbs - Gen. Sparks; Kermit Murdock - Dr. Robertson; Richard O'Brien - Grimes; Frances Reid; Carl Reindel; Ken Swofford; Mark Jenkins; John Carter; Bill Dunbar - First Airman

Credit

William Tuntke - Art Director, Helen Colvig - Costume Designer, Ridgeway Callow - First Assistant Director, Robert Wise - Director, Stuart Gilmore - Editor, Jack W. Holmes - Editor, John W. Holmes - Editor, Gil Melle - Composer (Music Score), Bud Westmore - Makeup, Boris Leven - Production Designer, Richard H. Kline - Cinematographer, Robert Wise - Producer, Ruby Levitt - Set Designer, Douglas Trumbull - Special Effects, James R. Alexander - Sound/Sound Designer, Waldon O. Watson - Sound/Sound Designer, Ronald Pierce - Sound/Sound Designer, Nelson Gidding - Screenwriter, Michael Crichton - Book Author

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Wikipedia: The Andromeda Strain (film)
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The Andromeda Strain

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Robert Wise
Produced by Robert Wise
Written by Novel:
Michael Crichton
Screenplay:
Nelson Gidding
Starring Arthur Hill
James Olson
Kate Reid
David Wayne
Paula Kelly
George Mitchell
Music by Gil Melle
Cinematography Richard H. Kline
Editing by Stuart Gilmore
John W. Holmes
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) March 12, 1971 (USA)
Running time 130 min.
Language English
Gross revenue Unknown

The Andromeda Strain is a 1971 science-fiction film, based on the novel published in 1969 by Michael Crichton about a team of scientists who investigate a deadly organism of extraterrestrial origin that causes rapid, fatal blood clotting. Directed by Robert Wise, the film starred Arthur Hill, James Olson, Kate Reid, and David Wayne. The film follows the book closely. The special effects were designed by Douglas Trumbull.

Contents

Filming

Robert Wise used a single set to create Wildfire's color-coded corridors, repainting it for scenes that take place on the different levels. Wise would use this trick again in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. When filming the scene where Dr. Ruth Levitt has an epileptic seizure due to watching a blinking red light, care had to be taken when choosing the frequency of the blinking, so it was the least likely frequency to induce seizures among susceptible viewers in the theater audience.

Cast

The cast of characters in the novel was modified for the film, most notably by changing the male Dr. Peter Leavitt in the novel into a woman, Dr. Ruth Leavitt. Screenwriter Nelson Gidding suggested the change to Wise, who at first was not enthusiastic, as he initially pictured the sex-changed Dr. Leavitt as a largely decorative character reminiscent of Raquel Welch's character in the 1966 film Fantastic Voyage. When Gidding explained his take on Leavitt, Wise resolved the question in an appropriately scientific way by asking the opinion of a number of scientists, who were unanimously enthusiastic about the idea. Eventually Wise came to be very happy with the decision to make Leavitt female, as Kate Reid's Dr. Leavitt turned out to be, in his words, "the most interesting character" in the film[1]. Another minor change was the character of Burton in the novel, who became Charles Dutton in the film; no reason was given for this name change.

A young Michael Crichton makes a cameo appearance in a non-speaking role during the scene where Dr. Hall is told to break scrub because he has to report to Wildfire, the government's secret underground research facility.

  • Arthur Hill – Dr. Jeremy Stone
  • David Wayne – Dr. Charles Dutton
  • James Olson – Dr. Mark Hall
  • Kate Reid – Dr. Ruth Leavitt
  • Paula Kelly – Karen Anson (nurse, laboratory technician)
  • George Mitchell – Mr. Peter Jackson (Piedmont)
  • Mark Jenkins – Lt. Shawn (Piedmont Team)
  • Peter Helm – Sgt. Crane (Piedmont Team)
  • Joe Di Reda – Sgt. Burk (Wildfire Computer Technician)
  • Ramon Bieri – Major Arthur Manchek (Scoop Mission Control)
  • Carl Reindel – Lt. Comroe (Scoop Mission Control)
  • Frances Reid – Clara Dutton
  • Peter Hobbs – General Sparks
  • Kermit Murdock – Dr. Robertson (White House Science Advisor)
  • Richard O'Brien – Grimes
  • Eric Christmas – Senator Phillips (Vermont)
  • Ken Swofford – Toby (Technician)
  • John Carter – Capt. Morton (military police)
  • Richard Bull (actor) – Air Force Major
  • James W. Gavin – Dempsey (helicopter pilot) (uncredited)
  • Garry Walberg – scientist (uncredited)
  • Victoria Paige Meyerink - Additional Character

A recorded voice by an unknown person also wakes up the main cast before their mission.

Critical reception

The opinion of critics is generally mixed, with some critics enjoying the film for its dedication to the original novel and with others disliking it for its drawn-out plot. Overall, the film has earned a 63% "fresh" rating from the film review site Rotten Tomatoes, based on 23 reviews.[2] However, its IMDb rating is higher -- 7.3/10 (73%) based on 123 reviews.[3]

Awards

The film was nominated for two Academy Awards:[4]

Soundtrack

Like Forbidden Planet, The Andromeda Strain is one of the few mainstream Hollywood productions to feature an electronic music score. The soundtrack was composed by composer-musician Gil Mellé, who is probably best known for his theme music for the 1970s Rod Serling TV series Night Gallery. It is a unique blend of electronically generated sound, manipulated taped sounds (musique concrete) and some traditional instrumentation (piano, double bass, percussion), punctuated by bursts of electronic white noise and pink noise.

A limited edition soundtrack (10,000 copies) was released by Kapp Records in 1971 under the supervision of director Robert Wise (at a cost of $20,000).[citation needed] The vinyl discs were hexagonal and came housed in a die-cut hexagonal enclosure (which folded out to reveal photographs from the film) attached to a square backing board. The album was re-released shortly afterward as a conventional circular 12" LP in a regular square sleeve.

Other media

Footage and stills from the movie were used in the first serial episode — titled "Population: Zero," aired January 18, 1974 — of the television show Six Million Dollar Man, an episode which deals with a town where all the citizens have succumbed to some external force.

The 1995 television series Neon Genesis Evangelion uses the computer readout "601" in green letters on a black screen to depict the same unreadable data error that is encountered in The Andromeda Strain. This occurs in several episodes, most notably in episode 5 "Rei I." In addition, there are two other concrete references to The Andromeda Strain in Neon Genesis Evangelion. First, the layout of Central Dogma is a near carbon-copy of Wildfire. Second, episode 13 Lilliputian Hitcher features an Angel which behaves much like Andromeda - a small crystalline life-form which attacks the seals and vents in Central Dogma, infecting the installation and threatening to trigger its self-destruct sequence.

See also

References

  1. ^ The Making of The Andromeda Strain, DVD documentary.
  2. ^ [The Andromeda Strain at Rotten Tomatoes. Accessed June 8, 2009.
  3. ^ [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066769/usercomments IMDb - The Andromeda Strain -- User Comments
  4. ^ "NY Times: The Andromeda Strain". NY Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/2247/The-Andromeda-Strain/awards. Retrieved 2008-12-28. 

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