| Foto (Vedi tutti 19 | slideshow) | Videos (see all 2) |
| Robert Duvall | ... | THX | |
| Donald Pleasence | ... | SEN | |
| Don Pedro Colley | ... | SRT | |
| Maggie McOmie | ... | LUH | |
| Ian Wolfe | ... | PTO | |
| Marshall Efron | ... | TWA | |
| Sid Haig | ... | NCH | |
| John Pearce | ... | DWY | |
| Irene Forrest | ... | IMM | |
| Gary Alan Marsh | ... | CAM | |
| John Seaton | ... | OUE | |
| Eugene I. Stillman | ... | JOT | |
| Jack Walsh | ... | TRG (as Raymond J. Walsh) | |
| Mark Lawhead | ... | Shell Dweller | |
| Robert Feero | ... | Chrome Robot #1 | |
| Johnny Weissmuller Jr. | ... | Chrome Robot #1 | |
| Claudette Bessing | ... | ELC | |
| Susan Baldwin | ... | Control Officer | |
| James Wheaton | ... | OMM (voice) | |
| Henry Jacobs | ... | Mark 8 Student | |
| Bill Love | ... | Mark 8 Instructor | |
| Doc Scortt | ... | Monk | |
| Gary Austin | ... | Man in Yellow | |
| Scott L. Menges | ... | Child #1 | |
| Toby L. Stearns | ... | Child #2 | |
| Paul K. Haje | ... | Trial Prosecutor | |
| Ralph Chesse | ... | Trial Proctor | |
| Dion M. Chesse | ... | Trial Defender | |
| Bruce Chesse | ... | Trial Pontifex | |
| Mello Alexandria | ... | Hologram Dancer #1 | |
| Barbara J. Artis | ... | Hologram Dancer #2 | |
| Morris D. Erby | ... | Hologram Newscaster | |
| Willie C. Barnes | ... | Hologram Comic #1 | |
| Richard Quinnell | ... | Hologram Comic #2 | |
| Jean M. Durand | ... | Hologram Listener | |
| Scott Beach | ... | Announcer #1 (voice) | |
| Neva Beach | ... | Announcer #2 (voice) | |
| Terence McGovern | ... | Announcer #3 (voice) (as Terrence McGovern) | |
| Julie Payne | ... | Announcer #4 (voice) | |
| James Cranna | ... | Announcer #5 (voice) | |
| Ruth Silveira | ... | Announcer #6 (voice) | |
| Bruce Mackey | ... | Announcer #7 (voice) | |
| David Ogden Stiers | ... | Announcer #8 (voice) (as David Ogden Steers) | |
| Bart Patton | ... | Announcer #9 (voice) | |
| resto del cast in ordine alfabetico: | |||
| John Rigg | ... | Computer Operator (uncredited) | |
| Matthew Robbins | ... | THX - End scene (uncredited) | |
Regia di | |||
| George Lucas | |||
Scritto da | ||
| George Lucas | (story) | |
| George Lucas | (earlier screenplay) | |
| George Lucas | (screenplay) and | |
| Walter Murch | (screenplay) | |
| Matthew Robbins | comic (uncredited) | |
Prodotto da | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | .... | executive producer | |
| Edward Folger | .... | associate producer (as Ed Folger) | |
| Larry Sturhahn | .... | producer (as Lawrence Sturhahn) | |
Musiche originali di | |||
| Lalo Schifrin | |||
Fotografia di | |||
| Albert Kihn | (director of photography) | ||
| David Myers | (director of photography) | ||
Montaggio di | |||
| George Lucas | |||
Architetto-scenografo | |||
| Michael D. Haller | (as Michael Haller) | ||
Direttore di produzione | |||
| Al Locatelli | .... | production manager (uncredited) | |
Dipartimento artistico | |||
| Ted Moehnke | .... | property master | |
Sonoro | |||
| Jim Manson | .... | location sound | |
| Walter Murch | .... | sound montage | |
| Louis Yates | .... | location sound (as Lou Yates) | |
Visual Effects | |||
| Michael Muir | .... | technical director (directors cut) | |
| Brad Alexander | .... | lead visual effects artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| John Andrew Berton Jr. | .... | visual effects supervisor (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Richard Bluff | .... | digital matte painter (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Dorian Bustamante | .... | visual effects (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Ian Christie | .... | digital effects artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Zachary Cole | .... | digital artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Lee Croft | .... | digital paint and rotoscope artist: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Chris Crowell | .... | digital compositor (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Sarahjane Javelo | .... | digital paint/rotoscope artist: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Ian Jenkins | .... | technical director: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Lars Jensvold | .... | visual effects editor (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Gary H. Lee | .... | visual effects (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Toan-Vinh Le | .... | digital artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Hiroshi Mori | .... | digital artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Ken Nielsen | .... | technical director (special edition) (uncredited) | |
| Ben O'Brien | .... | Sabre artist: ILM (2004 directors cut) (uncredited) | |
| Scott Palleiko | .... | technical director: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Brian Pohl | .... | digital artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Evan Pontoriero | .... | digital artist (2004 directors cut) (uncredited) | |
| Paul Sharpe | .... | digital artist (2004 special edition) (uncredited) | |
| Peter Szewczyk | .... | visual effects artist (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Catherine Tate | .... | digital compositor: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Eric Voegels | .... | digital artist: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
| Elbert Yen | .... | digital artist: ILM (2004 director's cut) (uncredited) | |
Controfigure | |||
| Duffy Hambleton | .... | bike stunts (as Duffy Hamilton) | |
| John Ward | .... | car stunts | |
| Carey Loftin | .... | stunt coordinator (uncredited) | |
Riprese e attrezzature elettriche | |||
| Ned Kopp | .... | assistant camera | |
| Steve Lighthill | .... | assistant camera | |
| William Maley | .... | gaffer (as William Mayley) | |
| Ken Phelps | .... | key grip | |
| Bernie Abramson | .... | still photographer (uncredited) | |
| Caleb Deschanel | .... | additional photographer (uncredited) | |
Dipartimento animazione | |||
| Hal Barwood | .... | animator | |
Casting | |||
| Ronald Colby | .... | casting supervisor | |
Costume e guardaroba | |||
| Donald Longhurst | .... | costumes | |
Dipartimento editoriale | |||
| Marcia Lucas | .... | assistant editor | |
Reparto musiche | |||
| Dan Wallin | .... | scoring mixer (uncredited) | |
Altro personale | |||
| Hal Barwood | .... | titles | |
| George Burrafato | .... | production assistant | |
| Lillian O. MacNeill | .... | continuity (as Lillian McNeil) | |
| Nick Saxton | .... | production assistant | |
| Stan Scholl | .... | production assistant | |
Ringraziamenti | |||
| Carl Bernstein | .... | thanks (as Cal Bernstein) | |
| Caleb Deschanel | .... | thanks | |
| Peter Szewczyk | .... | special thanks | |
| Haskell Wexler | .... | special thanks | |
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| Nineteen Eighty-Four | Star Wars | Minority Report | Logan's Run | Demolition Man |
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George Lucas has a fairly small body of work, as a director; and most of it is fairly simplistic, except this film. Lucas' first feature is steeped in the French New Wave mode of philosophical musings and strange visuals. Unfortunately, that doesn't necessarily make for an exciting film. However, there are enough intriguing ideas to sustain some interest, although you do have to fight off the boredom factor.
Lucas is, and has always been, a visual filmmaker. He is not great with actors and his films aren't noted for their performances, except American Graffiti. That was a more personal film, and Lucas probably had a clearer idea of the characters thoughts and emotions. Here, emotions are stifled by drugs and the wooden performances reinforce this.
According to Lucas, the film is the story of escape, told in three different forms: an escape from the drugs that keep people in check, an escape from a prison with no visible barriers, and an escape from the city itself. The final sequence contains most of the action, but is marred by the budget constraints.
Robert Duvall commands attention when he is on screen, but you never really feel like you get to know THX. Donald Pleasance, as SEN, provides a nice turn as the antagonist, of sorts. The rest of the cast is fairly forgettable, with only minor moments. The philosophical underpinnings of the film are often lost in pretension, the same flaw which hit the Matrix in its sequels. Lucas could have delivered his message in a far simpler fashion, probably with greater result. Still, the film does have its interesting moments and memorable ideas and images. The robot police are quite chilling, although they are used sparingly. The white prison is quite unsettling as well. The final escape is the most riveting sequence of the film.
The new DVD has Lucas' trademark tinkering. Only this time, the alterations help to add scope to the film. The city scenes are expanded to add complexity to the environment that was missing in the original. There are no fundamental story changes, as in the Star Wars Special Edition (Greedo shoots first). The commentary and featurettes help the viewer to understand the intent of the story and help to establish the context in which it was made. Lucas makes a statement that he would like to return to this kind of film. Given the disappointing nature of the Star Wars prequels, I wouldn't mind seeing Lucas take another crack at a more cerebral sci-fi story. My only request is that he works with a great scriptwriter.