Logan's Run (1976) USA
Logan's Run Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Michael Anderson
Studio:MGM (Warner)
Producer:Saul David
Writer:William F. Nolan, George Clayton Johnson
Rating:4
Rated:PG
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:0792839692
UPC:0027616702920
Price:$24.98
Awards:Nominated for 2 Oscars. Another 7 wins & 2 nominations
Genre:Sci-Fi Action
Release:2008-12-30
IMDb:0074812
Duration:120
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:70 mm 6-Track
Languages:English
Subtitles:English, French
Features:Anamorphic
Michael Anderson  ...  (Director)
William F. Nolan, George Clayton Johnson  ...  (Writer)
 
Michael York  ...  Logan
Richard Jordan  ...  Francis
Jenny Agutter  ...  Jessica
Roscoe Lee Browne  ...  Box
Farrah Fawcett  ...  Holly (as Farrah Fawcett-Majors)
Michael Anderson Jr.  ...  Doc
Peter Ustinov  ...  Old Man
Randolph Roberts  ...  2nd Sanctuary Man
Lara Lindsay  ...  The Woman Runner
Gary Morgan  ...  Billy
Michelle Stacy  ...  Mary 2
Laura Hippe  ...  Woman Customer
David Westberg  ...  Sandman
Camilla Carr  ...  Sanctuary Woman
Greg Lewis  ...  Cub (as Gregg Lewis)
Ashley Cox  ...  
Bill Couch  ...  
Glenn R. Wilder  ...  
Candice Rialson  ...  
Jessie Kirby  ...  
Comments: Welcome to the 23rd Century: A perfect world of total pleasure, With just one catch...

Summary: If you can stifle the urge to laugh at its pastel unisex costumes and futuristic shopping-mall décor, this extravagant science fiction film from 1976 is still visually fascinating and provocatively entertaining. Set in the year 2274, when ecological disaster has driven civilization to the protection of domed cities, the story revolves around a society that holds a ceremonial death ritual for all citizens who reach the age of 30. In a diseaseless city where free sex is encouraged and old age is virtually unknown, Logan (Michael York) is a "sandman," one who enforces this radical method of population control (but he's about to turn 30 and he doesn't want to die). Escaping from the domed city via a network of underground passages, Logan is joined by another "runner" named Jessica (Jenny Agutter), while his former sandman partner (Richard Jordan) is determined to terminate Logan's rebellion. Using a variety of splendid matte paintings and miniatures, Logan's Run earned a special Oscar for visual effects (images of a long-abandoned Washington, D.C., are particularly impressive), and in addition to fine performances by Jordan and Peter Ustinov, the film features '70s poster babe Farrah Fawcett in a cheesy supporting role. Jerry Goldsmith's semi-electronic score is still one of the prolific composer's best, and Logan's Run remains an interesting example of '70s sci-fi that preceded Star Wars by less than a year. --Jeff Shannon