Runtime: 109 minutes
Directed by: David Butler
Starring: El Brendel, Maureen O'Sullivan, John Garrick, Marjorie White, Frank Albertson
From: Fox
For those that enjoy me watching/discussing old cinema, what a relatively obscure curio this is. How I first learned of this sci-fi musical comedy from Fox is lost to time. I’d love to see a restored version of the film… it’s just now in the public domain so I’ll presume that it won’t be any physical release plus it’s Fox so yeah… that’s regrettable as the production design and effects are the clear highlight. Metropolis this isn’t; instead, expect plenty of melodrama.
This world’s 1980 has flying vehicles, people only have names like J-18, food & drink is in pill form and marriages are arranged by the government. We follow J-18, who is miffed that he can’t marry LN-18-understandable as it’s the most famous name in the cast today, Maureen O’Sullivan. J has RT-42 as his roommate; sadly, even in this world there’s odious comic relief and his name was RT-42. They befriend a dude revived from being deceased 50 years after being struck by lightning. The former Peterson calls himself Single O. Single O was portrayed by a long-forgotten vaudeville comedian whom called himself El Brendel and you might remember from 1927’s Wings. His gimmick was being a Swedish immigrant; that was a negative stereotype of the time.
O served as the fish out of water character that learned about this bizarre 1980 world where the worst aspect is that sex isn’t a thing-babies are created artificially! I won’t reveal much more of the plot—except that out of nowhere, J-18 (a great pilot) is guided to fly a ship to Mars for the first time. In fact, he did get his ass to Mars. The movie is rather creaky at times, as static and flat as you’d expect for something in the first few years of the talkie era. The “musical numbers” typically are just one or two people singing to the camera while it is stationary; those songs are best described as “inoffensive.”
All that noted, I was still charmed by this oddity. It was strange, full of imagination, and great sets/backdrops throughout. There is one instrumental musical number that is buckwild; it involves at least 50 people doing a routine with an amazing backdrop. As O also provided some laughs and there was never boredom while viewing this colorful creation, this is why Just Imagine was something I liked despite its flaws. Its predictions of the future that were accurate weren’t that bold… others predicted the likes of the 1930 idea of the Ring doorbell camera and Skype. Yet, I was entertained by this quaint picture.