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Writer/director Michael Crichton. In Delos, a big-money theme park of the near future, robots provide your every need or want. It is divided into three sections: Medieval World, Roman World, and Westworld. Visitors Richard Benjamin and James Brolin have a great time drinking, bedding local wenches (androids?), and shooting robots that spurt realistic blood.
Then the park’s computer slips a cog and the robots turn on the guests. Yul Brynner agreed to star as the villainous gunfighter provided that he could base his robot on the character he played in The Magnificent Seven movies and wear the same black outfit. He also wore special contact lenses that reflect light eerily as the robot.
Supporting cast includes Majel Barrett of Star Trek, Alan Oppenheimer, Dick Van Patten (I’m sure you remember his son from MonsterVision’s Zone Troopers), and Steve Franken
89 minutes, panavision, Rated PG
In this hour-long weekly TV-series, the scientist who created the robots, angry that they’re used only as playthings, unleashes them on the world. Each week, a Delos policeman and his comely assistant track down one of them. It might be a robot who replaced a crewman on a nuclear sub, or a Senator’s assistant. Maybe even the Senator him/herself! Unfortunately, like the Planet Of The Apes tv-series, CBS assumed the TV-series would have a built-in audience from the movies and gave it little support. It debuted March 5 and was gone at the end of the season in May, 1980. Lon Shaw directed the series and wrote the pilot episode.
Directed by Steven Spielberg. Former medical doctor Michael Crichton returned to his satirizing of big-time theme parks where nothing can go wrong with this screenplay, co-written from his novel of the same name. This time, billionaire Richard Attenborough has taken dinosaur DNA from insects trapped in ancient amber (a trick actually used previously in the 1960s Batman TV-series) to grow full-size dinos. Before the theme park opens, he invites paleontologists Sam Neill and Laura Dern for a preview, along with mathematician Jeff Goldblum (of MonsterVision’s The Fly and Independence Day). Also along are Attenborough’s grandchildren. Why not? Nothing can go wrong with the electric fences and security run by computers…
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