Westworld (1973)
Runtime: An economical 88 minutes
Directed by: Michael Crichton
Starring: Richard Benjamin, James Brolin, Yul Brynner, Norman Bartold, Alan Oppenheimer
From: MGM
In another later than posting for me, my plans for
Wednesday changed so another rare phenomenon occurred: posting a review
for a movie less than an hour after viewing. Finally tackling Westworld
wasn’t a bad Plan B. Considering the movie was famous enough to inspire a
prestigious HBO show that had a first season most loved and subsequent
seasons that had a more polarizing reception… about time for me & a
famous effort from a decade whose cinema I typically enjoy.
Through
cultural osmosis, for years I’ve known of Westworld’s plot; this
allowed me to write a decent amount of this review even before checking
out the picture on Turner Classic Movies. Long ago I learned this
concerned human-presenting androids in the theme park Delos that has
three lands (Western, Roman, Medieval Europe; what I didn’t know was
that this (according to Wiki, at least) was in the far-flung future of…
1983. For those concerned about AI, the malfunctioning and their
subsequent murderous streak won’t assuage those fears.
My opinion
of a film that I should have viewed & reviewed many years ago: I
had a very good time. A simple yet effective storytelling trick was
used: Richard Benjamin is a nervous lawyer visiting for the first time
while James Brolin (sadly w/o facial hair but still delivering a quality
performance) is a veteran to the experience, explaining Delos,
answering questions and offering encouragement on how to interact w/ the
androids. Arguably, the best way to dump exposition and explain the
world to the viewer as well.
I do understand why the idea was
turned into a TV show; it’d be a great adult amusement to cosplay in a
historical era and live out fantasies, including that of a badass hero.
You can also have sex with the androids! It’s also wholly believable
those machines would malfunction. Heck, while not related, when the plot
point was mentioned that humanity “hadn’t perfected the hands” of the
androids, of course I thought of AI and its issue w/ hands.
Westworld
was quite enjoyable; of course I’d be fond of the early 70’s computer
tech and witnessing the 1973 version of a screensaver. However, I was
most captivated by the full, complete story that was satisfying despite
the length of only 88 minutes. While I’d be curious to see the in-world
explanation for how this was all created, but that was extraneous
information for the story presented here. What we got was
incredibly economical.
Much of the focus is on Benjamin and
Brolin. At first, the former was kind of a dweeb but it wasn’t long
before he was an enjoyable protagonist to follow. I’d never actually
seen a Benjamin movie in full before. After the first two acts, Yul
Brynner’s Gunslinger character (dressed like his character from The
Magnificent Seven deliberately) becomes integral to the story. Further
assets included the strong directing from Michael Crichton, some rad
moments of cinematography from Gene Polito that sadly is missing from
modern film and the vivid score from Fred Karlin which was more than
just the expected Western score in the appropriate area.
As
sometimes proclaimed by me, what a fool I was for not viewing the movie
much sooner. Who knows if I’ll ever bother w/ just the first season of
the Westworld TV show; despite its more lukewarm reputation, the 1976
sequel flick Futureworld is still on the table for me.