The Sci-Fi Movie That Ended Two Hollywood Legends: BRAINSTORM (1983)

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • Overshadowed by a scandalous tragedy and vicious studio politics, the last film of both Natalie Wood and Douglas Trumbull is both a failure and a sci-fi classic.
    If you're looking for a "review" in the traditional sense, then let me just say I like this movie. This video, however, is a "review" in the literal sense (using the Miriam-Webster definition "a retrospective view or survey"), in that I'm going over the history of the film and its place in cinema history.
    In other words, please stop commenting on how my videos aren't what you consider "reviews."
    #Brainstorm #NatalieWood #DouglasTrumbull
    00:00 Intro: Tragedy at Sea
    01:45 Synopsis
    02:34 Production History
    05:34 Shameless Self-Promotion
    06:01 Casting
    09:27 Filming
    10:05 Trumbull vs. MGM
    13:45 Release & Legacy
    15:08 Opinion & Analysis
    17:13 Outro
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    ----------
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    Prelude No. 13 by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
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Комментарии • 270

  • @zooblestyx
    @zooblestyx 7 дней назад +7

    As far as finishing a movie after a star dies during production, I think we can all agree that Ed Wood nailed it on the first try.

    • @TheUnapologeticGeek
      @TheUnapologeticGeek  7 дней назад +4

      Dude. You win. I bow down to this comment!

    • @zooblestyx
      @zooblestyx 7 дней назад

      @@TheUnapologeticGeek You are far too kind. I merely mentioned what we all already knew.

    • @agranero6
      @agranero6 5 дней назад

      I am pretty sure Ed Wood didn't care to his actors like Trumbull did and this made the work far more difficult.

  • @richard63
    @richard63 26 дней назад +90

    I don't care if it was considered a flop. I liked it.

    • @Wesley-eu7rn
      @Wesley-eu7rn 22 дня назад +7

      I really enjoyed it.

    • @llothar68
      @llothar68 21 день назад +10

      Carpenters The Thing and Blade Runner were also considered Flops , so I don’t care

    • @georginatoland
      @georginatoland 14 дней назад +6

      I liked it so much I saw it twice in the theaters. Dragged my parents out to see it the second time.

    • @djsupernature1
      @djsupernature1 13 дней назад +4

      I loved it🤠 have not watched it in 30 years, think it is available on Tubi😊

    • @warsincs
      @warsincs 13 дней назад +1

      Money doesn't equal quality.

  • @-Cinderman
    @-Cinderman 27 дней назад +39

    I agree with your assessment that this movie has been unfairly panned. It's a great story with 10 tons of "heart fuzzies". I think Natalie was at her most expressive level of acting and looked more beautiful than ever. Christopher Walken is... well, he's Cristopher Walken, enough said. The supporting cast is brilliant, from Louise Fletcher to Cliff Robertson. Obscenely underrated.

  • @ShaneSemler
    @ShaneSemler 27 дней назад +55

    I adore this movie! No one talks about it but it’s fucking amazing. This among movies like Dreamscape, Altered States, and Buckaroo Banzai warped my young brain into the totally stable adult I am now.

    • @llothar68
      @llothar68 21 день назад +5

      Altered States … I need this as BluRay and some LSD pills

    • @alyzu4755
      @alyzu4755 19 дней назад +5

      😂😂😂
      I LOVE "Buckaroo Bonzai"!

    • @r3altalangodfrey39
      @r3altalangodfrey39 19 дней назад

      Good for u, because brainstorm is actually real.

    • @ThisSteveGuy
      @ThisSteveGuy 14 дней назад +5

      Same here. I loved all those movies as a kid growing up in the 80s, with a well worn video rental card and a cable box. Even back then, I could tell Brainstorm had a clunky ending that didn't really fit, but there were so many really great moments sprinkled all throughout which more than made up for it.

    • @NoidoDev
      @NoidoDev 12 дней назад

      I only know some of them by name. Are these like Inception and Paprika (Anime)?

  • @davidrubinstein9722
    @davidrubinstein9722 28 дней назад +27

    For those lucky enough to see this movie in a theater that could maximize the 35/70mm viewing on a very large screen, this movie was a sight to behold. The opening sequence gave everyone a real sense of vertigo.

    • @daannzzz7415
      @daannzzz7415 27 дней назад +5

      Yes. At the 70mm theater we saw it at the huge curved screen accentuated the opening credits. They looked like they were bulging off of the screen without and 3D glasses. It was stunning.

    • @d4mdcykey
      @d4mdcykey 21 день назад +1

      Agreed, one of the most memorable movie experiences I've ever had, plus I got to watch it in a theater right by where they filmed some scenes in Raleigh and a few "movie-related" people were in the audience.

    • @ballyastrocade5672
      @ballyastrocade5672 19 дней назад +6

      I never actually realized, until I saw it later on home video, that they actually expanded the "memory playback" sequences with a wider aspect ratio than the "real-world" sequences. At first, I thought there was something wrong with my laserdisc player (which tells you how long ago this was!), or the disc itself, until I picked up on the pattern of when the letterboxed aspect ratio would change from one to the other. On a modern widescreen TV, it isn't *quite* so noticeable, but boy was it obvious on a letterboxed image on a 4:3 CRT!

  • @ryancoulter4797
    @ryancoulter4797 28 дней назад +39

    Got to see this movie as a kid the night broadcast tv was showing The Day After. My parents had been invited to a coworkers house for a TDA watch party like it was GoT. They hired a babysitter with strict instructions not to watch TDA. So our baby sitter let us watch the illegally descrambled UHF HBO channel and Brainstorm was what was on.

    • @CantankerousDave
      @CantankerousDave 27 дней назад +5

      I was in 5th or 6th grade then. We were *told* to watch The Day After as "homework" and discuss it in class the next day.

    • @iGame3D
      @iGame3D 25 дней назад +4

      That's a good memory. The Day After gave a whole generation of kids trauma that was reported in Time or Scientific American about a year later.

    • @Keithjmcc
      @Keithjmcc 20 дней назад +1

      Our neighbors unlocked our HBO box for us lol. I remember him telling my dad to put red nail polish Ack on the top bracket screw head, that was the security device for no tampering lol.

    • @SpunkMonkey
      @SpunkMonkey День назад

      I remember how TDA was such an EVENT back then! Fortunately we lived in a rural area, but if we'd still been in suburbs I know we'd have had that same kind of gathering at a friend's home.

    • @ryancoulter4797
      @ryancoulter4797 День назад +1

      @@SpunkMonkey it was a very rural area. It was a four to five hour drive to get to the city

  • @berendharmsen
    @berendharmsen 27 дней назад +12

    Saw it in the cinema when it came out. Much like when I saw Blade Runner in the cinema when it came out, I watched it in an almost empty theatre. Both were panned when they came out and I absolutely loved both of them.

  • @Guernicaman
    @Guernicaman 27 дней назад +19

    REALLY loved the Elion-Hitchings Building & it's architecture, both inside & out. Feels like a building from an alternate future that never was, like something out of Blade Runner or Tron. Wish we had more architecture like that today.

  • @cpnscarlet
    @cpnscarlet 28 дней назад +38

    A favorite movie. The subject matter was fascinating and Trumbull made you believe the hardware was real, but you had to give the butchered script some extra thought as they directly addressed the type of things the "array system" would be used for - everything from travelogs to porn. "I'm more than I was..." is something I'm still trying to figure out.

    • @joechip4822
      @joechip4822 23 дня назад +1

      Just try an average dose of psychedelics, and you will know what it means to become 'version 2.0' of yourself...

    • @cpnscarlet
      @cpnscarlet 21 день назад

      @@joechip4822 When I don't need my security clearances anymore, I might take you up on that.

    • @lanazak773
      @lanazak773 17 дней назад

      Isn’t AI full of “inscrutable arrays”?

  • @seethransom
    @seethransom 27 дней назад +13

    This movie doesn't get enough attention. I'm glad you did something about that.

  • @JanetDax
    @JanetDax 28 дней назад +30

    Interesting how the same technology in the hands of James Cameron gave us Strange Days, a crime drama where memory recordings were hustled like illegal drugs.

    • @brianboye8025
      @brianboye8025 27 дней назад +9

      Strange Days, what a remarkable scifi movie. It was immersive.

    • @RoyCyberPunk
      @RoyCyberPunk 27 дней назад

      ​@brianboye8025
      I believe that both Brainstorm and Strange days take place in the same universe with the technology being refit into optical media which was the rage at the time Strange Days take place and if they ever make a sequel to Strange Days I hope they are allowed to connect the dots all the way to Brainstorm. Nowadays the Brainstorm/Strange Days tech would be over the internet with probably websites like Tik Tok and RUclips hosting human memories files think Go Pro on steroids.

    • @JanetDax
      @JanetDax 27 дней назад +4

      @@brianboye8025 Yes it was. There was more to the story than Brainstorm or Total Recall.

    • @lsimon343
      @lsimon343 26 дней назад +1

      Oh my God, I love that movie that movie made me fall in love with Firnnes and Bassett I think that movie is an unappreciated underappreciated gem

    • @tuberaxx
      @tuberaxx 26 дней назад +8

      James Cameron wrote the screenplay, but Kathryn Bigelow directed Strange Days.

  • @dr.medieval1131
    @dr.medieval1131 26 дней назад +9

    As a young boy, I watched Brainstorm several times on HBO back in the summer of '84. I liked it. Especially the scene when Walken's character first tries to hack into the system to access the "death tape." Btw, great score by the late James Horner.

  • @kgtrains
    @kgtrains 28 дней назад +11

    I loved that movie... 25 years later I worked for a company that had labs like the movie and they looked the same. ...

  • @ralphsexton8531
    @ralphsexton8531 28 дней назад +13

    Honestly one of my favorite movies that Walkin was in. Great actors, and really intriguing ideas. I have to agree with you, Geek, about Louise Fletcher being the strongest performance. I was young when I saw this, and I wasn't sure she had only been acting, she was so convincing. I did also enjoy her in DS9, because good stories need good antagonists. Now... to go listen to Weapon of Choice to decompress after remembering that scene...

  • @psmithrpm
    @psmithrpm 26 дней назад +6

    Despite its flaws, it remains my all-time favorite SF movie. Trumble was clearly a genius.

  • @flmlvr
    @flmlvr 7 дней назад +1

    Great review, Eric. Whether you are impressed with what I'm about to tell you, I can't say, but what I'm about to tell you is true. When Natalie Wood died - I was only 21 when that happened - I was heartbroken. I had grown up on her films and like many other teenage boys at the time, was smitten with her. The irony here? In those days, the Los Angeles Times Sunday paper would actually come out on Saturday, and I couldn't wait to tear into the Calendar Section which was all entertainment-related, and I thrived on it. The highlight of that issue was an interview with Christopher Walken. Towards the end of the article, I would read that he was making a movie with Natalie Wood called "Brainstorm" to be directed by Douglas Trumbull. The next day Natalie had died. By Monday MGM issued a statement saying that they were considering the decision very carefully whether or not to finish the film. Either ways, I would get all caught up on that particular story. Will it ever be finished? Or will it be scrapped? Then the announcement came the following February that that the principal photography would be completed, but only after the rough cut would it be decided to go ahead and finish the movie - and there would be no fake Natalie hidden behind big hats and such - when you saw her, it was her. So I bit my nails. I even wrote to MGM and pleaded with them to complete the film. Well, as we now know, they said yes. Then once again, the movie goes into limbo as apparently Trumbull did NOT complete the principal photography. UGH. But then FINALLY the decision is made to complete it. Call this serendipity or whatever, here in Los Angeles, we used to have a film festival called FILMEX. And one of their lineups would be a tribute to Natalie Wood in which "West Side Story" would be shown - which a special appearance by Douglas Trumbull himself who would also bring a 3 minute clip from the movie that was still in limbo. So yes, I went and luckily got in. And the 3 minute clip looked promising - it was the sequence where Walken and Wood reconcile their strained relationship. It moved the audience. And get this: months later after the announcement was made they would complete the film, the very friend I went to that screening to also worked for a movie-related magazine and had a special invitation to see a demonstration of Showscan - and Trumbull himself would be there. And yes, she invited me. For all the stress that poor guy went through, he looked surprisingly good - not haggard or tired or anything. Skip to the chase: The demonstration knocked me out. OMG. NOW I was REALLY waiting for "Brainstorm". Too bad they couldn't use the Showscan technique, but I was okay with 70mm and 35mm, but I was certain this movie was going to be a gem of a film. So yes, I saw it on opening day, at a very big theater with a giant screen and a great sound system. And though I didn't hate the movie, I didn't love it either. I was 23 when the film came out, and even at that young naive age could tell that the movie was already weak to begin with - it seem to suffer from Trumbull trying to throw everything in plus the kitchen sink - plus a few appliances to boot. They should have just had a plot and a subplot, and maybe an afterlife sequence that we could some how identify with. I don't think Wood's missing scenes would have made any difference - the film still would have only been mediocre. But damn, what scenes that were good were very good. But too bad it didn't all mesh. But this particular film will ALWAYS be a special part of my moviegoing experience. I followed the story, I wrote the studio, I saw a clip while it was in limbo, and followed it to opening day. Just wish the movie could have been right up there with "2001: A Space Odyssey" - but hey, can't always get what you want.

  • @VolkswagenNut1969
    @VolkswagenNut1969 27 дней назад +5

    I remember when this film came out. It had been in production hell for 2 years, It wasn’t well advertised, the movie trailers as I recall were not very good, it was getting bad to lukewarm reviews from critics, and there was a dark cloud over it because of Wood’s highly publicized mysterious death.
    It just plain never had a chance.

  • @EdMorbius46
    @EdMorbius46 27 дней назад +4

    Definitely one of my favourite hard SF films, despite its drawbacks. It is one of a kind, and I have eagerly awaited a review from you. Well done, TUG (though I’m disappointed you did not mention the music by the late James Horner, one of my three favourite film composers). I found my first viewing of this absorbing, despite great drawbacks. It was in a flea pit cinema, so lacked the full 70 mm format, and a few rows ahead of me was the distraction of the only other occupants in the cinema pulling their feet up off the ground because of rats scuttling past! The film deserved better. 🙂
    I agree that the best performance was from Louise Fletcher, while Christopher Walken and Natalie Wood were both more than adequate in their roles. The special effects were innovative for their time, particularly the “memory bubble” effect, and the subject matter at the time was groundbreaking and interesting. Having focused largely on the production hassles, you perhaps ran out of time for other interesting matters such as the question of life after death. On that point, the plot’s visual hints were more ambiguous than they might have seemed - appearing to support the religious view, though leaving the opportunity for atheists to interpret the visuals as simply in the mind of Fletcher’s character.
    This film was in the best tradition of hard science fiction, leaving food for thought long after viewing. I agree, it is a science fiction classic, that initially struggled to find the right audience. Since then it has undergone a renaissance, though, with BluRay copies now prohibitively expensive online.

  • @snowmansspecialshows2438
    @snowmansspecialshows2438 3 дня назад +1

    I saw Brainstorm the first week it was released in the Cine Capri Theater a wide curved screen that made the opening title appear as if it left the screen and was floating separate 10 feet away in mid air. It was 3D without the glasses and pure cinema magic. Love your video agree this film should not be forgotten. I feel James Horner composed a master piece in soundtracks and deservers a mention to the brilliance in this film. For loosing a main character/Star in the middle of shooting, Trumbull salvaged it masterfully and in my opinion does not suffer from the criticism you agreed with from shortsighted wannabes that never worked on a production. The Film is a Masterpiece on all levels and purposely squelched for its accurate portrayal of corporate military greed.

  • @seaninness334
    @seaninness334 28 дней назад +21

    Nice review, Eric. Per that last question, it's my understanding that the insurance riders on the bigger budget films includes stipulations for additional funding for reshoots if an actor, at least the "above the line" ones, dies during principal photography and probably breaks down in a number of ways ( we all no those pesky clauses insurance providers like to slip in) such as if the actor dies after principal photography but before additional photography or various post production stages.
    At the time, from my outsider perspective, Natalie Woods' death seemed to be so twisted and exploited by different parties. The story about what happened that night always sounded like BS and I think Walken's career suffered (seemingly unjustly) and Robert Wagner's (came off as a suspect and stayed out of sight until maybe Wayne's World?). The end product was muddied in a number of ways. IMO, I call that "death by committee."
    I did like the film, comparing it somewhat to Dreamscape that seemed to edge it out.
    I'm not sure when MGM got into so much financial trouble but the late 70's and 80's were not good. They started selling off big chunks of their film rights to all of their big musical films. I worked there briefly in the early 90's, temping in between jobs in their payroll and residuals department. I knew exactly what kind of paychecks were being cut for their top executives. The most memorable residual check was to Marlon Brando for about $40,000 for a movie he did called Missouri Breaks. I couldn't tell you how often those were paid out, but I thought it was good money for a film I'd never seen from about 10 years(?) before, even if it were only annually. I looked it up once but still haven't ever watched it. This also occurred at their old location, and they were preparing to move the studio to somewhere over in Santa Monica due to all their financial restructuring.

    • @TheUnapologeticGeek
      @TheUnapologeticGeek  28 дней назад +1

      I've never heard of Missouri Breaks. 😂

    • @seaninness334
      @seaninness334 28 дней назад +5

      @TheUnapologeticGeek it's actually older. Came out in 1976. Arthur Penn directing, Jack Nicholson, Randy Quaid, Harry Dean Stanton. I'm not a big fan of westerns as a genre. Everyone looks like they haven't had a bath in months or years to me. Well, except for the water tower scene Rachel Welch does in 100 Rifles... 😉
      Or Jenny Agutter in China 9, Liberty 37...

    • @r3altalangodfrey39
      @r3altalangodfrey39 19 дней назад +1

      @@TheUnapologeticGeek I think they redrumed her because the technology in brainstorm is actually real. Trut.h.stream media did a report on that years ago. Its on b.itch.chute. ask me, I will lead u

  • @SteveMacSticky
    @SteveMacSticky 28 дней назад +5

    This film made a big impression on me when I watched it on TV in 1988 when I was a kid. That death sequence frightened me so much, memorable visuals

  • @DavidGreen_au
    @DavidGreen_au 27 дней назад +4

    For me, this film is one of my favourites, and that is due to the cast, premise, and effects.
    I did see this at the cinema, and I have a copy in my library. It is tragic that the film could not have been completed due to the greater tragedy of Natalie's demise.
    As far as the in-film technology goes, it all seemed okay to me. I see the tapes as a multi-track recording, or which some data is physiological, which is why the key recording in the story way kill as it feeds cardio shutdown instructions into the brain.
    I also figured that emotional responses could be triggered from physiological control.
    But that is just my conjecture.
    It was a great film, and as stated, a forgotten classic. And unfortunately, a footnote in certain careers.

  • @whatthef911
    @whatthef911 27 дней назад +6

    Saw this many times on HBO back in the day. It was one of my favorites along with Looker and Dreamscape.

    • @kirnpu
      @kirnpu 27 дней назад

      Watched Dreamscape a few too many times myself. I can still hear the smarmy saxophone music in my head.😄

  • @snapmalloy5556
    @snapmalloy5556 28 дней назад +3

    As a youngster, one of my first crushes was Natalie Wood. Fell in love with her when I saw "The Candidate"
    That made this movie a tough one to watch.
    What a fantastic review.
    Eric, how you don't have 50K subscribers I'll never understand

  • @MrMightyZ
    @MrMightyZ 23 дня назад +2

    The change in format for the brainstorm sequences blew me away on a 27” CRT on VHS. It was a big room full of people and we were smoking some weed but we all had a blast watching it. Maybe it’s technically a 6 but it’s an 8 on the entertainment scale.

  • @agl1138
    @agl1138 14 дней назад +1

    SPOLIERS: It is a good movie, but the ending is not quite as optimistic as some people think. It records a death experience, similar to the near death experiences many people report. But that does not mean that the experience is 'true', merely that it is real. People really experience this kind of thing, but it does not mean there is an afterlife. Maybe they experience this, die and and never experience anything ever again?

  • @SpunkMonkey
    @SpunkMonkey День назад

    Wow, so many memories...! All this tracks with what I remember from the time (a teenager following sci-fi film industry news), and the reminiscing I heard later at THX. Plus I have a good friend who worked closely with Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner and their family during those years; while I never pushed him to share any presumption on what happened on that boat, he truly loved them as such a wonderful family. Later, I *did* get to meet Louise Fletcher on a set (one of those disposable movies to get a paycheck for a role far below her stature). I got to tell her how her death scene in Brainstorm was formative for me, her character's dedication selfless act for science. I want to think I came across well, but she's such a pro her gracious response could have been pap and I'd never know. ;-) FWIW I've heard of the Esalen Institute back when I lived in Marin County, and it sounded exactly as froofy as it comes across here.

  • @IrnBruNYC
    @IrnBruNYC 18 дней назад +1

    It’s Research TRIANGLE Park (RTP). When I was a kid, the making of this movie was a big deal because it was filmed about a half an hour from my hometown. It has always held a special place in my heart, and honestly, it is kind of a miracle that he was able to salvage it after the tragedy. And it makes a great double feature when paired with Strange Days, one of my favorite movies from the 90s (that also kind of flopped).

  • @alexp3589
    @alexp3589 21 день назад +1

    Saw Brainstorm for the very first time last year and loved it. Didn't know about the troubled production and wouldn't have guessed it. Sadly the habit of dropping films to get the insurance money is more prevalent nowadays with all the bean counters in Hollywood.

  • @tomsenior7405
    @tomsenior7405 28 дней назад +2

    I genuinely like this film. Sure, it falls apart at the end, but I'm fine with that. It only adds to the charm of Trumbull's effort. (If tragedy can be called charming?). I especially like Horner's soundtrack. I know Brainstorm is not considered a mainstream classic, but that doesn't matter to me. I would rather watch this again for the umpteenth time, than sit through a damn Marvel dollop of tosh. Thanks for this retrospective. Bloody lovely.

  • @derekroberts6654
    @derekroberts6654 27 дней назад +3

    I always thought it was a bit uncanny for Louise Fletcher to have that intense death scene while in real life Natalie Woods real life death happened 😞

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 14 дней назад

      Why? The film death was scripted, the Actress death a sudden occurrence. There is nothing to say that Natalie suffered during her death because, the bruising and cuts on her body were confirmed to be post-mortem at the time.

  • @bender7565
    @bender7565 27 дней назад +3

    I love this movie, I would show off knowing everything about it when very few knew it existed. I doubt it was Trumbull but the gorgeous beloved Natalie got a buttload of grief for being a bit heavy after her hiatus from films. Being from Va Beach I was familiar with Kitty Hawk and that made it special.

  • @donaldfinch1411
    @donaldfinch1411 8 дней назад +1

    Every person who has ever tried to connect with another person will find the "this is me" sequence heartbreaking.

  • @tommytwotacos8106
    @tommytwotacos8106 16 дней назад

    I saw this movie when I was younger, during the period of my life when I was actually studying movie making, and I found it to be baffling for many of the same reasons mentioned already. The pacing was bizarre as hell, the way the plot lurches and jumps from one crazy idea to the next has a nauseating effect on anyone who wants to keep up with the actual story, and the hand waving that goes on regarding not just the mechanics of the technology at work but the universe they exist in itself is so frequent and used to gloss over such major aspects of what you're watching that it can't help but take you out of the film. It needed to be a series of movies or have its concept paired down even further. I could've seen it as an awesome hour long Rod Serling offering from Night Gallery or something along those lines.

  • @ralphorteg
    @ralphorteg 28 дней назад +4

    Thank you. I was intrigued by this movie from the first time I saw it when it debuted in 1983. I fell in love with the performances and the soundtrack by James Horner. To this day I think it's one of his finest. Thanks for recognizing this as a science fiction classic. While it wasn't perfect for Douglas Trumbull as a director, I'm still amazed by what he managed to get to the screen. The special effects always left me confused, but in a very special way that has changed with repeat viewings. I've really grown to love what's best about this movie.

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten 19 дней назад

    One of the things that do get lost with this film when shown like this on video is the intended sensory shock of the brainrecording/playback sequences. In a cinema that's showing it correctly a moviegoer would watch the film with unused screen to the left and right. Quickly tuning it out and accepting it as a regular 1.85:1 film with almost mundane sound. Then, when the big scenes happen, the periphery is filled with the full 70mm footage and surround sound. Of course, these shocks only work in short bits. You do rather quickly get used to them, so it goes back to the 35mm footage for most of the runtime.
    It's the reasoning that later got popular with IMAX and how they open up the letterbox for the full image height in key scenes.
    But. For home video. There. There's a conundrum. In order for the effect to work even a little bit. The biggest image needs to be the 70mm footage. But that means you need to make the 35mm bits (which is most of the movie) smaller. So on home video, you have most of the movie windowboxed with black all around. Like a malfunctioning picture in picture circuit.
    The alternative, to zoom in on the 35mm footage so it fills the screen, solves some things. But now the 70mm sequences are lesser than the 35mm bits.
    So either you have a windowbox that calls out that something unusual is going on, when you are really supposed to think nothing is about to happen. Or you have full screen for most of it but lose the wow factor.
    I prefer the windowbox method as it's the closer to the intended thing. And on a projector and scope screen mask you can then get the intended shock at home. But I do not envy the distributors who has to sell the unusually formated film to viewers who might not even accept letterboxes at all on their screens.

  • @northprime_unlimited
    @northprime_unlimited 28 дней назад +2

    I love this movie with all my heart! It was WAY ahead of its time. For me this movie was life altering in terms of how I looked at the world or beyond it (I saw this at 10). The score from James Horner was also an exhilarating experience! Looking back at it now the ending does feel truncated but it doesn’t change how I feel about the film. This video was wonderful because I didn’t know any of this information other than her death. It’s too bad it didn’t succeed but again like TRON it was just too soon.

  • @knife-wieldingspidergod5059
    @knife-wieldingspidergod5059 27 дней назад +3

    I would like to think that Strange Days is the unofficial sequel to Brainstorm. The company was able to save the technology and improved on it.

    • @RoyCyberPunk
      @RoyCyberPunk 26 дней назад

      Yup for all intended purposes they take place in the same fictional universe.

  • @williamblakehall5566
    @williamblakehall5566 5 дней назад

    While I do feel very badly for all its problems, I don't have any clear or encouraging memories of this. I feel a bit jaded, as it seems to me that two later movies, Flatliners and Strange Days -- which I'm glad you noted -- dealt with these same themes far more successfully. There was an interesting irony in that, at that time, Robertson was AT&T's leading TV pitch man. "Reach out and touch someone," indeed.

  • @kiruppert
    @kiruppert 10 дней назад

    In the 80s, my parents would record basically any movie they watched, and so I found this on an old VHS when I was a teenager sometime in the 90s. It left an impression on me, I remember liking the ending sequence where Walken's character is watching the death recording.

  • @troubadour723
    @troubadour723 26 дней назад +1

    Perhaps by being so reliant on technology to tell its story, maybe Brainstorm was predicting a future where we have become so reliant on technology that we literally can't function without it; just as the developers of this highly profitable sector wanted.

  • @rampapandiontinling
    @rampapandiontinling 27 дней назад +3

    Another similar, kind of trippy, version of this theme was "Until The End Of The World" by Wim Wenders.

  • @danielweisman496
    @danielweisman496 14 дней назад

    Thank you for the video!
    In spite of the flaws, I think the movie is redeemed by the ending of what Ms. Fletcher's character had experienced after death.

  • @jackalopewright5343
    @jackalopewright5343 12 дней назад

    I saw this movie in a widescreen theater inside a Chuck E Cheese in Dallas, Texas. It included the short at the beginning where the film appears to break and the maintenance guy goes behind the screen with a ladder and looks like he's pushing against the screen with his face. It included the widescreen 70mm parts which was really a cool effect.

  • @buzzcrushtrendkill
    @buzzcrushtrendkill 27 дней назад +1

    Great review. It is a fascinating movie on different levels, not all with the screenplay or direction. The mystery surrounding Walken and Woods "relationship" and her death. Besides that, the locations in Research Triangle NC and the cinematography. I agree, the film really needed a capable director. IMO Turnbull could have focused on the technical effects. There was so much potential for this movie but it sadly didn't materialize.

  • @gregmark1688
    @gregmark1688 18 часов назад

    And here I thought I was the only person who connected "Strange Days" to "Brainstorm"!
    I saw this in a theatre, and it was great except ... yeah, that story. I had no idea wtf was supposed to have happened with that ending. The FX were amazing, tho.

  • @siarnne
    @siarnne 28 дней назад +1

    I like the idea of instead of remaking successful movies over and over again, studios should put the time and budget into remaking movies that had good stories but ran into execution problems. It worked with BAttlestar Galactica. Looking forward to Strange DAys

  • @NelsonStJames
    @NelsonStJames 5 дней назад

    This movie was phenomenal to see on a big screen able to handle the new 70 mm format when it was released. The story was interesting but seeing it in 70 mm was the real draw, and maybe one of the reasons that people don’t really bring it up. kind of like Avatar, it’s an ‘okay’ film, that happens to have some of the best 3D you’ve ever seen on an IMAX, and if you aren’t watching it in that environment, it doesn’t really leave an impact.

  • @morgangallowglass8668
    @morgangallowglass8668 27 дней назад

    Sadly, these days, in a move that I always see as ghoulish, they would simply CGI the deceased actor into the movie. Brainstorm is a movie I have always enjoyed, but I have to agree, it comes off as rushed and unfinished. Brilliant vid as always!

  • @LRTrack
    @LRTrack 18 дней назад

    Loved this movie. Cried over Natalie's death. The concept was intriguing and now we have haptic VR, almost the same kind of experience!

  • @Clarence_Oddbody
    @Clarence_Oddbody 19 дней назад

    The Hobbit footage they showed at Sho-west in 2012 turned a lot of people off, as at the higher frame rate the sets looked like sets, so the higher production design costs kinda killed it for wider use. Gemini Man was a test bed for how much things had improved in just 7 years, so it will be interesting to see how emerges in the next 2-3 years.

  • @darwoodtechnology
    @darwoodtechnology 27 дней назад +1

    Watched the film recently and really liked it, but you can see where the breaks are. It's a really good idea and certainly had potential to be either great or better remembered than it is today. I really loved how clunky the prototype is versus the final product as things progress. It would a great candidate to be remade and modernized.

  • @tylerthompson1842
    @tylerthompson1842 25 дней назад +1

    Natalie Wood actually got her start as a child actor on miracle on 34th Street

  • @jimboAndersenReviews
    @jimboAndersenReviews 5 дней назад

    I saw it at some point in the eighties, and several time on cable in the eighties and nineties; I had no idea, that the production had such problems.
    Well reported. So I subscribed.

  • @db_cooks
    @db_cooks 3 дня назад

    This is one of my all time favorites. The whole life after death aspect was fascinating! I didn’t realize they hadn’t finished filming before Natalie’s death.

  • @rehetbutler
    @rehetbutler 28 дней назад +3

    One of my favorite movies ever!

  • @BanthaPooDoo64
    @BanthaPooDoo64 27 дней назад +1

    Wow 😮,I’m glad this film was finished to me it’s SCI FI masterpiece classic, seen it on the big screen when came out and it’s been in my video library since the 80’s very nice video and info was very interesting to hear but shocking knowing how close this awesome film almost wasn’t.

  • @Llanishenlad
    @Llanishenlad 25 дней назад

    Great vid and great to see this flick getting the BTS treatment on here!

  • @mahatmarandy5977
    @mahatmarandy5977 27 дней назад

    I remember the whole “love triangle” aspect of Wood’s death - that both her husband and boyfriend were in the boat. I naturally assumed this was true since the press was pushing the murder angle and I was like 15. What did I know? Rewatched the movie a year ago, and was stunned by how awkward Wood and Walken were together. I reviewed the movie online, saying it was strange how little chemistry they had since they were dating at the time.
    Someone who claims to know such things contacted me and said that, no, they were never dating. Tumble himself said that he’d never seen two actors with as little chemistry between them. Evidently he’d thought they were at one point since they were apparently very close, but once he put them together in a scene he realized they were so platonic that they’d size up in their romantic scenes together. Or so the person contacting me (obviously not Trumble since he’d already died) said.

    • @buzzcrushtrendkill
      @buzzcrushtrendkill 27 дней назад +1

      And Walken and Woods were both married at the time as well. The screenwriter, Robert Stitzel says in an interview that their affair during production was well known. 22:07 mark of the video linked here ruclips.net/video/-SJd2nutBJE/видео.html

  • @raycooper3463
    @raycooper3463 23 дня назад

    I’ve always loved Brainstorm. Yes, even in my late-teens, I realized its unfinished quality, but I guess I saw it for what it was supposed to be, as opposed to what the final product was that they eeked out after Natalie’s death. It’s amazing how,mafter seeing Close Encounters at the age of 11, I could always “smell out” a movie in which Douglas Trumbull was involved. RIP Natalie and Douglas.

  • @krono5el
    @krono5el 27 дней назад +1

    Yes!! wide screen and high frame rate is all i've ever wanted, that guy is awesome.

  • @palmercolson7037
    @palmercolson7037 28 дней назад +1

    I remember going to see this movie in the theater when it came out. It was interesting, but I didn't find it groundbreaking or moving. It didn't leave a strong impression.
    I was surprised by the mention of the Eselan Institute. The institute is linked to many new-age ideas about human potential and physics. I think the book "the Dancing Wu-Li Masters" was written by staff who were trying to link Buddhist and Taoist philosophy with modernphysics.

  • @nicholashylton6857
    @nicholashylton6857 22 дня назад

    It has a special place in my heart because it made me consider what it would be like to experience the world in another person's mind. Sights, smells, emotions, and tactical senses.
    Not merely being privy to information uploaded into your mind, but sharing a soul.

  • @BelindaShort
    @BelindaShort День назад

    I didn't know anything about the issues behind this movie but I always loved it when I was younger

  • @parkpunk2
    @parkpunk2 21 день назад

    The great line from the trailer: One of the government guys says, 'They're gonna be able to plug right in to the old noodle".

  • @genx7006
    @genx7006 15 дней назад

    I just watched this film, and it was surprisingly ahead of its time in many respects.The slapstick laboratory scene was beyond ridiculous and felt like an entirely different movie.

  • @johnmurray8835
    @johnmurray8835 День назад +1

    I enjoyed this movie immensely.. I thought it was fascinating.

  • @bobfitzpatrick8952
    @bobfitzpatrick8952 27 дней назад +1

    That was interesting seeing those dates again for Natalie Wood - I was in army basic training, and my parents were sending me newspaper articles about it.

  • @SidlyBoDidly222
    @SidlyBoDidly222 27 дней назад +1

    One of my all time favorite movies that I stumbled upon when Blockbuster was a thing.. It inspired me to write a poorly named and never to see the light of day screenplay called .. Mind Change.... and it's as bad a read as the title is ridiculous.
    But I had fun.

  • @Fredrik-iz4ou
    @Fredrik-iz4ou 18 дней назад

    Interesting, I thought Trumbull was given carte blanche to do anything after "2001", but turned too goofy moving out to the outback, refusing even an internet link. How wrong I was. An actor dying during filming depends on how far into the filming. Dies early: Replace and reshoot. Later to late, remap and spend the actor's salary on CGI, keeping the actor digitally. Prepare all major film work by scanning all actors to use as back-ups, re-shoots, amendments, etc. Edit: Brainstorm is a bad film with a story that doesn't lead anywhere. But soon technology will have come near to Digital Showscan, with 4K or 6K UHD and 180 frames per second, I guess.

  • @jamied1579
    @jamied1579 27 дней назад

    I always loved this film.
    Unfortunately, when it came to the Blu-ray release, they didn't handle the changing aspect ratios very well.
    The 1.85:1 ratio was shown within the 2.40:1 aspect ratio, which meant large portions of the film were just a small picture in the middle of the screen, surrounded by blackness on all sides, making it unwatchable for me.
    I'm hoping they'll fix this if they ever do a new 4k remastering...

  • @deraykrause4517
    @deraykrause4517 27 дней назад +6

    As a kid in the 80s who had just discovered "self abuse", I thought the infinite orgasm loop scene was both hilarious and awesome at the same time. Still hoping science can get that ball rolling before all my swimmers dry up for good.

  • @henryjraymondiii961
    @henryjraymondiii961 6 дней назад

    I saw Brainstorm 3 times the first two weeks it was available at a local theater in MICHIGAN. I had to look for it in an actual "newspaper" as a placed ad by the single theter owner. There was no obvious "push" by the studios. In Detroit, way back then for many this was an almost never imagined concept, especially in a rather finished slick movie for national sober release. There was no semblance of some "elon" character in these actual neaspapers. Let's face it---it WAS a different world back then!!!!! In that millieu this was a crisp relief from mundane scicence fiction which drifted into fantasy much too often---if there was ANY available.😉

  • @Maniac536
    @Maniac536 28 дней назад +1

    Douglas Trumbull is dead???? No! Btw he also directed Back to the Future The Ride one of my favorite theme park rides of all time.

  • @christopherblack3102
    @christopherblack3102 23 дня назад

    Very odd because to me this movie never felt incomplete. In fact the opposite. I think some movies are meant to shine on cable tv, not at the box office. And that’s what happened with Brainstorm.

  • @peterharris38
    @peterharris38 27 дней назад +1

    I saw and loved this movie when it was released and had to wait years for it to come out on beta, then vhs I still have the vhs copy today.
    Even by today's standards this was a groundbreaking piece of art.❤

  • @mck1972
    @mck1972 21 день назад

    Brainstorm is a solidly good movie with SFX that were ahead of their time. Every SCI-FI should see it at least once.

  • @doug2424
    @doug2424 4 дня назад

    I saw it in the theatre too, the movie is like a palindrome it shows there are two sides of technology depending on the user good or bad. nerve induction technology looks pretty powerful, and it probably will be. Seeing how the hardware was built was pretty cool too. It's the ultimate novelty it would destroy all other media.

  • @juliobro1
    @juliobro1 26 дней назад

    I saw this as a kid, my formative years as a movie fan.
    Sci-fi had a particular impact on me, and, for some reason, Brainstorm marked my brain.
    That heart attack scene was very impressive and imagining the future of media and how the senses would be connected to it was fascinating.
    I hoped someone gave it the UHD treatment, but sadly...

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 2 дня назад

    Like "Strange Days", "Brainstrom" does the proper cyberpunk thing of showing a technology, and then showing ways in which it can be twisted and changed,

  • @JohnCamacho
    @JohnCamacho 26 дней назад

    While we like to complain about reboots, I'd like this to be rebooted. I think there's a great story in this, even updated for today's AI.

  • @1kylecurry
    @1kylecurry 25 дней назад +1

    Not a bad movie in fact a solid & interesting premise, admittedly some disjointed execution, but still watchable & obviously finished under terrible circumstances.

  • @Gen-X-Memories
    @Gen-X-Memories 16 дней назад

    I saw this while on a family vacation to the beach in the early 80s. The condo we were staying at had cable including HBO! That was a real treat because we lived in the country so it wasn't available. As a 12 year old in the early 80s brief nudity was always a bonus. Anyway, I thought the movie was interesting and the scene when she recorded her death during the heart attack was very well played.

  • @bradchoi9679
    @bradchoi9679 28 дней назад +1

    I would love to see this remade, but for VR equipment! All the regular scenes could be standard front-view stuff, but when experiencing the effect, switch to 360 degree mode!

    • @ralphsexton8531
      @ralphsexton8531 28 дней назад

      That's a really interesting idea

    • @cpnscarlet
      @cpnscarlet 28 дней назад

      I always thought that a device like this would be the "end" of humanity as we all disappeared into our little VR worlds, but it appears it's taking a lot less tech to turn brains to mush.

  • @wompa70
    @wompa70 26 дней назад

    I saw this at some point as a teen. It had to have been broadcast. I remember liking it. I had no idea this is what Natalie Wood was working on when she died. The "Bio of a Space Tyrant" series by Piers Anthony used the same concept with something they called feelies.

    • @ballyastrocade5672
      @ballyastrocade5672 19 дней назад

      I'm pretty sure this was shown a number of times on HBO and/or Showtime, at least, and probably made its way to Sci-Fi Channel as well. I'd be surprised if it was ever shown on network TV as "The Sunday Night Movie" or anything like that, though...

  • @bigguy1960
    @bigguy1960 19 дней назад

    Brainstorm was a great movie! It was one of the first movies my folks bought for our RCA Selectavision (C.E.D. Disc) player! The Future is THEN!

  • @Aliens_Gonna_Get_Ya
    @Aliens_Gonna_Get_Ya 27 дней назад

    Great review!!! 👍😊

  • @interstellarconundrum4774
    @interstellarconundrum4774 17 дней назад

    Fletcher's death scene was hard to watch and made by heart hurt. Way too realistically painful.

  • @thrashpondopons8348
    @thrashpondopons8348 24 дня назад

    That was one of the problems with many Films of this period... Effects over Good Story!

  • @cmbaz1140
    @cmbaz1140 28 дней назад

    Never heard of this ...🤔
    fascinating...thanks man...

  • @stevenhandzel5929
    @stevenhandzel5929 27 дней назад

    Your clues to the next movie have been getting more and more difficult for me to figure out. The Abyss?

  • @scotsmith2391
    @scotsmith2391 15 дней назад

    I saw this in the theater...although it had already been relegated to the $1 Cinema circuit, I really really liked it. Surprisingly, it was a youth pastor at my church that recommended it to my friend and I to go see.

  • @byrons8956
    @byrons8956 10 дней назад

    I liked Brainstorm and have not forgotten it.
    Not surpriseing studios were doing the same things they do to mivues today.

  • @AH-sr5px
    @AH-sr5px 27 дней назад +1

    Movie is better than the narratives opinion and should seen more often on main tv or streaming services. Okay, the story doesn't explain how the technology works, it doesn't need too or takes away from the story. Seek out to watch as worth the search.

  • @bettywing52
    @bettywing52 7 дней назад

    Always a fan of Trumbull's work, that inspired some of the visual aestheic in the present run of space opera. There is supposedly a new wave of Cyberpunk series and films on the way, adaptations of the Neuuromancer stories of William Gibson. They will have a deep karmic connection to this film.

  • @colinwatt9387
    @colinwatt9387 27 дней назад

    I had no idea this movie existed when I came accross it on TV; I loved it and it's still one of my all time favourites.

  • @jaywoelfel9228
    @jaywoelfel9228 17 дней назад

    I remember the film being sold trying to downplay her death, hardly even mentioning it. As to how much different, better or worse, it might have been without her death, I've never seen or heard anyone go into that, which would be interesting. I took an industry tour of his showscan which was pretty cool. The final visuals owe much to the book HOUSE ON THE BORDERLAND. Walken is too young for Wood and or they just have no chemistry together, the movies hadn't really figured out how to use Walken's talent. I'm bit baffled by you saying you don't think the movie really works and then saying it's a classic at the end. Also some mention of James Horner's excellent music should probably be made. I do like the film, the FX play much better in a theatre where the aspect ratio change is felt more than constantly being noticed, as on any TV even in HD, the FX scenes actually get smaller, though wider. I prefer Silent Running as a whole.

  • @bobdobbs420
    @bobdobbs420 28 дней назад

    I remember this movie. How is it forgotten?

  • @fasillimerick7394
    @fasillimerick7394 20 дней назад

    The first time I saw it I thought that even before the military would be interested in the technology, a different class of Hollywood filmmakers would want to make, uh, "Blue movies". Sure enough.

  • @chrysopylaedesign
    @chrysopylaedesign 13 дней назад

    I could be mistaken, but I think that's stock footage insert @10:59 of a very young Scarlett Johansson?