In 1973 a small little science fiction film was released by MGM called 
Westworld,
 then three years later American International Pictures made a sequel, 
and it kind of sucked. The original movie was written and directed by 
science fiction author Michael Crichton, and as I mentioned in my review
 of 
that movie it was cool high concept idea, executed very 
well but was best watched without giving too much though into how this 
park would actually run. In the case of director 
Richard T. Heffron’s Futureworld you have a film with half a good concept but very poor execution. So what exactly went wrong with 
Futureworld?
The film’s primary protagonist is newspaper reporter Chuck Browning (
Peter Fonda), who apparently wrote the expose on the disaster at 
Westworld,
 and now a with a tip from a murdered source he wants to investigate 
what the Delos Corporation is up to now. He’s partnered up with TV 
reporter Tracy Ballard (
Blythe Danner)
 who was to be sent on a publicity junket to check out the new park, and
 she’s too not happy about being stuck shotgunning with print journalist
 Chuck. It’s kind of cool seeing a futuristic 70s movie where one 
character claims that "print is dead" and that, “
No one reads anymore.”
 Of all the stuff in this movie the filmmakers try to pass off as 
“futuristic” that is really the only one that was rather prescient.  Of 
course this antagonism is more about providing sexual tension than 
anything else.
 
“Print journalism is dead, and I don’t like you. So sex later?”
Tracy Ballard would be right at home at 
Fox News;
 she's constantly criticizing Chuck for being suspicious, and is worried
 that their hosts will cancel her television special if they get caught 
actually investigating stuff. The fact that two years ago a park run by 
Delos resulted in the death of over 50 guests, as well 95 of their own 
technicians being killed or wounded, is more than reason enough to want 
to do a thorough investigation of this new park, no matter how much 
money they tell you they spent on upgrading their tech. Dr. Duffy (
Arthur Hill), one of Delos’s head honchos, explains how Delos has spent over 1.5 billion dollars rebuilding their equipment and that, “
Not only is new Delos the most fantastic resort in human history, it is also failsafe.” And how exactly do back up this claim that not only is 
Futureworld the “Happiest Place on Earth” but also the safest? Well Dr. Schneider (
John Ryan)
 reveals that all the monitoring technicians for the park are now 
robots, sighting human error the cause of the Westworld disaster.  Dr. 
Schneider apparently likes to rewrite history as it was clearly 
established in the last film that it was a computer virus, caused by 
programs that were designed by computers themselves, that was the real 
culprit.
 
“Guys, haven’t you heard about the dangers of a technological singularity?”
For those of you not up on your computer sciences the 
technological singularity
 is the hypothesis that the invention of an artificial 
super-intelligence will abruptly trigger runaway technological growth, 
resulting in unfathomable changes to human civilization. Whether this 
will result in a utopia or a robopocalypse is the big question. This 
film will not try and answer that question. Instead this film wastes 
countless minutes showing us the wonders of this park; where guests can 
drink from the fountain of youth in 
Spa-World, joust with nights in 
Medieval World and in 
Futureworld they can indulge in holographic chess, robot boxing, or skiing on Mars.
 
Apparently in the future we’ll be wearing brightly coloured mattress covers.
When we aren’t being subjected of lame comedic moments like the Japanese dignitary Mr. Takaguchi (
John Fujioka) sneaking a camera into 
Medieval World (Get it? He's Japanese and always has a camera) or a game show winner going on and on about having sex with a robot, “
Once you make it with a robot chick you’ll never want anything else,”
 we are subjected to watching Chuck and Tracy wander up and down an 
endless amounts of maintenance corridors. Not only are these scenes 
tedious but it only goes to showcase what an inept investigative 
journalist Chuck is.  At one point they find a bank of machines and he 
just starts throwing switches at random, and when Tracy questions what 
he’s doing his response is, “
Don’t bother me, I’ve got an instinct for these things.”
 Sadly his “instinct” fails him and instead he turns on a machine that 
generates three samurai warriors. It’s at this point that we realize we 
aren’t watching a science fiction movie anymore but one that is leaning 
more towards science fantasy. Luckily our “heroes” are saved by a 
mechanic named Harry (
Stuart Margolin),
 who just so happens to have been friends with the dead tipster that 
brought Chuck here in the first place. It’s with Harry’s help that the 
two finally uncover what is really going on in Delos.
 
Our heroes take a break to meet Harry’s robot pal Clark.
This movie does give us a nice surprise as it is soon revealed to us that this movie isn’t just a retread of 
Westworld,
 a computer malfunction isn’t causing robots to kill, it’s much more 
insidious than that, it turns out that world leaders and captains of 
industry are being invited to this park so that they can be replaced by 
clones that are controlled by Delos. While at the park targeted guests 
are drugged, and while asleep they are spirited away to a lab where they
 are scanned both physically and mentally so that the duplicates will be
 so good that even the creators can’t tell them apart.
 
I sense a small problem with that last bit.
This leads to evil clone Chuck facing off against good Chuck atop a 
Futureworld launch tower while Tracy gets into a gun duel with her evil clone amongst the ruins of old 
Westworld.
 It gets a little interesting here as the clones have all the knowledge 
and memories of the original so that they are able to guess where their 
opponents will run and what they’ll try to do. That’s all well and good 
but if I was programming evil clones I’d have added martial arts and 
marksmanship to give my creations an edge. But just who is behind this 
nefarious plan? Could it be one of Blofeld’s plots for world domination?
 What about Lex Luthor and the Legion of Doom?
 
Or is it creepy Dr. Schneider?
And
 this is where the movie completely falls apart. While trying to escape 
Chuck and Tracy are confronted by Duffy, who proceeds to tell Chuck 
that, “
The human being is a very unstable, irrational, violent 
animal. All our probabilities studies indicate that if left alone you’ll
 destroy much of this planet before the end of the decade. We at Delos 
are determined that this doesn’t happen. We don’t intend to be destroyed
 by your mistakes.” Chuck is told that the duplicates of the world 
leaders are programed to first think of the welfare of Delos and accept 
their instructions. Tracy and Chuck were chosen to be replaced so that 
Delos could use them fabricate good publicity, which in turn would draw 
more world leaders to Delos to be replaced. So Delos is kind of a 
passive aggressive Skynet.
 
And Duffy turns out to be a bargain basement T-800.
This
 is not intrinsically a bad idea, and if the film had sprung this on us a
 little earlier it could have worked, but instead we get this revelation
 dumped on us with but fifteen minutes to go, without enough time to 
wrap things up properly. We never learn if this actually a case of 
artificial intelligence deciding we aren’t bright enough to run the 
planet and that a computer mind is better suited to the job, or if there
 still a human mad scientist behind it all? When Chuck and Tracy exit 
Delos, while pretending to be their evil counterparts, they leave 
without finding out if Dr. Schneider is also a robot or just your 
standard evil human villain. The film ends abruptly with the Chuck 
explaining to Tracy that he’d managed to call his editor, who is even 
now running the exposé on Delos, and that the whole world will know what
 they are up to. Nice that the filmmakers didn’t feel the need to give 
us that scene. Then the two exit Delos under the watchful eyes of Dr. 
Schneider, who believes them to be his evil duplicates, just as the not 
quite dead Tracy Clone staggers up to reveal that he’s letting the wrong
 ones go. Chuck turns and gives Schneider a salute as they leave.
 
Is he flipping off Dr. Schneider or us the viewer?
Where
 Westworld was a fun and somewhat goofy science fiction thriller 
Futureworld
 tried to go with a more serious conspiracy theory aspect, and it never 
quite gels with the science fiction theme. One of the film’s biggest 
missteps is maybe going too far with the futuristic science; in 
Westworld
 we were introduced to a park that had lifelike robots, something we’ve 
already had a taste of in reality with the Disney parks, but in 
Futureworld
 they’ve got machines that can just generate Japanese samurai right out 
of thin air. At one point in the film Tracy is given a chance to try out
 a machine that well let others see what you are dreaming; not only is 
this a bit of fanciful science fiction but it’s also a terrible idea. 
You have no control over what you dream and now complete strangers can 
watch, how is that a good idea? This scene is also where they 
ham-fistedly stuff in a cameo of Yul Brynner who played the killer robot
 gunslinger from the original film. In Tracy’s dream she is at first 
stalked by the Gunslinger, but then she is saved by him, and then has 
sex with him?
 
Tracy has some really strange fantasies.
It’s
 a bizarre scene, and as dreams don’t always make sense it's probably 
the most realistic moment in this movie, but it also served no real 
purpose other than giving us that cameo. Too much of the film’s hour and
 forty-five minute runtime is this kind of padding, and we never really 
get a sense that our heroes are in danger. The trick to a good science 
fiction thriller is to keep the believability factor as high as 
possible, because if you don’t you are in danger of creating a 
disconnect with the audience and they will quickly lose interest. There 
is some interesting ideas presented in 
Futureworld, 
replacing world leaders with clones is pretty ingenious, but the 
filmmakers don’t bother to really explore any of these ideas, instead it
 becomes your standard thriller with a completely telegraphed “button” 
ending. If you happen to catch it late one night while surfing channels 
give it a look, but if you want to watch a good movie about replacing 
people with doubles your better off watching
 The Stepford Wives.
 
Delos does make nice models though.
 
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