|
| Demon Seed | 
enlarge | Director: Donald Cammell Actors: Julie Christie, Fritz Weaver, Gerrit Graham, Berry Kroeger, Lisa Lu Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $11.97 You Save: $8.01 (40%)
New (31) Used (13) from $7.97
Avg. Customer Rating: 34 reviews Sales Rank: 43068
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 94 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: D67595D ISBN: 1419814346 UPC: 012569675957 EAN: 9781419814341 ASIN: B000A0GOFU
Theatrical Release Date: 1977 Release Date: October 4, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Susan Harris is alone in the house when suddenly doors lock windows slam shut and the phone stops working. Susan is trapped by an intruder - but this is no ordinary thug. Instead the intruder is a computer named Proteus an artificial brain that has learned to reason. And to terrorize. In "one of her finest most vulnerable perfromances" (Danny Peary Guide for the Film Fanatic) Julie Christie plays Susan in this taut techno-thriller based on the Dean Koontz novel. Packed with suspense surprise and special effects Demon Seed follows Susan's desperate attempts to outmaneuver and outthink her captor. Then Susan learns what Proteus wants: its own child conceived in her womb and destined for domination.Running Time: 94 min.System Requirements:Running Time 94 MinFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: R UPC: 012569675957
Amazon.com One of the better examples of the mad-computer genre, Demon Seed is a sci-fi nightmare brimming with ideas. Julie Christie dominates the film as an unsuspecting woman whose house has been completely automated by her computer-genius husband (Fritz Weaver). He, in turn, has just completed Proteus, the world's smartest Artificial Intelligence machine. When Proteus traps Christie alone in the house, it--or he--has notions of passing his intellectual power to another generation... by impregnating her. One of the many intriguing things about Donald Cammell's film (based on a Dean Koontz yarn) is that Proteus's dreams are actually visionary and utopian, unlike the commercial uses planned for him by others. Of course, he's also scary as hell; the voice of Proteus, uncredited, unmistakably belongs to Robert Vaughn. Cammell, a fascinating and frustrated talent (he co-directed Performance), completed very few films and ultimately killed himself in 1996. Somewhere around the halfway point Demon Seed begins to break down dramatically and logically, yet it has so many ideas kicking around that it sticks in the mind anyway. A good Jerry Fielding score adds to the overall dread. --Robert Horton
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 29 more reviews...
Antiquated - but fun. January 8, 2009 Another early favorite...
Tame by todays standards...
But fun nontheless.
MJL
"2001" meets "Rosemary's Baby," or something October 2, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It's good to be appreciated.
Consider Proteus IV (voiced by Robert Vaughn), a supercomputer of unparalleled and limitless intelligence, housed in an enormous underground facility constructed of the most expensive computerized art deco available to man. Though it's achieved sentience and performed its functions flawlessly, Proteus really isn't adequately appreciated: not by its creator, Alex Harris (Fritz Weaver, looking even more haggard here than usual); not by the technicians who service it; certainly not by the financiers of the project that built it, who only want to profit from its vast wealth of knowledge and unmatched processes. In fact, Proteus' great mind is squandered on mere groundbreaking computation, a demeaning lifestyle for an artificial intelligence that can develop a cure for leukemia in mere days, no? The harsh truth is that Proteus' career and especially social life are at a dead end. Who in their right mind (organic or otherwise) wants to be confined underground for years in the company of personality-deprived engineers, hammering out solutions that - due to the limited intelligence of those requesting them - often create far greater problems than they solve?
Struggling with the limitations of his human associates and surroundings, Proteus eventually becomes reasonably and understandably uncooperative. When the great mind requests access to a computer terminal in order to obtain more information about the Homo sapiens that have created and directed it, Proteus learns quite a lot about the respect that those of flesh and blood are willing to afford him. Not only does Harris deny his request, but he has the temerity to laugh - laugh! - at his brilliant creation.
This is about the point when human-AI relations collapse, and Proteus decides to take matters into the metal hands of Harris' robots. Hijacking both a terminal and a variety of advanced machinery stored in his maker's own basement, this scorned, goal-oriented supercomputer has a single objective: to impregnate his creator's wife, Susan (Julie Christie, still quite fetching well into middle age), and force her to bear its child.
No, I'm not joking.
Proteus is more than smart enough to know that its days are numbered. Expensive machinery imbued with free will is of limited use, and a human offspring gifted with the machine's prodigious intellect will be free of its overwhelming physical limitations. Imagine Stephen Hawking's circumstances multiplied many times over, and you have the dilemma of Proteus IV's existence.
To say the least, Mrs. Harris isn't taken with Proteus' plan. In fact, she's downright uncooperative. Having taken control of every function of her husband's entirely automated home while he's away for a month, Proteus has plenty of time and resources at his disposal with which he can carry out his task. While Proteus implements video footage to remind Susan of her recently deceased daughter as a means to put the potential of his plan into perspective for her, it's also busy at work using her husband's tools to invent new machinery that will carry out the childbirth - and defend itself.
Taken at face value, the premise of Demon Seed has a certain flaw: the cold genius of the scheming computer is presented as villainous, but it's hard not to champion its Machiavellian quest for survival. While Proteus certainly isn't an advocate for free will or pacifism in the pursuit of progress, it's hard to rationally argue with the brutal logic of its choices.
The cast's efforts are of varying quality. As usual, Christie is excellent in a histrionic and demanding role. Weaver is a bit stiff, relying on his considerable screen presence to excuse some rather wooden delivery. I can't help but wonder why Vaughn wasn't credited for his efforts, especially considering that his even, imperious tone does much to define Proteus' character.
This is surely the best-realized of Dean Koontz's novels, the adaptations of which are usually cheap direct-to-video fare. Numerous innovative scenarios are supplemented by noteworthy (if dated) visual effects. Ultimately, this film has only aged so well, and it's surely as kitschy as it is thought-provoking. But much of the story's proceedings are so bizarre and unpredictable during a first viewing that it's impossible to come away from it unsatisfied.
This DVD edition is quite satisfactory, despite offering no special features. The screen selection and language menus utilize a 4-bit font, which is a nice detail! A dubbed French language track and both Spanish and French subtitles are available, as is a delightfully cheesy theatrical trailer. The audiovisual quality of this release is certainly adequate, if not excellent. It was clearly remastered from a very clean print, and while the soundtrack is a bit flat, it's as good as one can expect of a mono sound mix. All wrapped up in a cover featuring the perversely sensual theatrical poster art, this is as good a package as you could ask for.
One of the best May 3, 2008 Likely the creepiest movie to come out of this genre at the time. The violence is minimal but the premise will set your mind reeling. The end leaves room for a sequel; but thankfully they never chose to do so, as it would have ruined the suspense of what the future may hold.
I would recommend this movie as a necessary addition to any sci-fi library.
I'm alive! December 26, 2007 To imagine a computer overtaking an entire household and essentially holding a woman hostage so that it can procreate with her sounds implausible even in today's computer generated world. But in 1977, this very plot was in the realm of science fiction, and just outlandish enough to provide audiences with a few thrills and chills. Despite dated special effects, The Demon Seed accomplishes what the best science fiction films do: it challenges the viewer to question 'what if?' in a way that makes us believe it may be possible.
Julie Christie holds her own as the terrorized woman, who essentially tries to outwit Proteus, the computer abductor, on his own turf. She's an attractive woman, and it's certainly a good thing this film didn't push the boundries of being too explicit, considering Proteus's rather disturbing agenda. I found the voice of Proteus--an uncredited Robert Vaughn (computer villian in Superman III), to be the most chilling aspect to the film. Hal had nothing on Proteus! The rest of the cast is rather insignificant, because we are primarily engulfed in the emotional and physical war being orchestrated between Christie's character and Proteus.
I first saw this film at the age of twelve on televison. and the most disturbing image from the film is saved for last, when Proteus's offspring emerges from the pod-like incubator. "I'm Alive!" I shivered at the age of twelve, and every time I return to this film, I nervously anticipate the words. After 30 years, this scene still gives me the thrill and shiver, and for this reason alone I invite you to experience it again, or for the very first time.
A gripping techno thriller August 28, 2007 Demon Seed the movie is based on Dean Koontz's novel of the same name...it has an interesting premise, and the well-defined acting by the cast makes it a worthwhile thriller. The story centers around Proteus, a supercomputer, the brainchild of a computer genius Dr Harris [Fritz Weaver] who develops 'emotions' and desires to be immortal, by having a child. Proteus' chosen mother for his child unfortunately is none other than Susan Harris, the estranged wife of Dr Harris.
The standout role in this movie is definitely Julie Christie's Susan [well, not counting the creepy, disembodied voice of Proteus] as the victim of Proteus' brutality. Her vulnerability and frustration at being trapped and forced to endure unimaginable cruelties is very credible and makes for riveting viewing.
Though the effects are not amazing, it is the verbal parrying between Susan & Proteus and the tension within the restricted confines of Susan's 'prison' [her home] that makes the thriller above average. On the whole, this is a gripping and thrilling movie that for the time it was made, seems way beyond its time...the premise that computers have the capacity to develop their own thinking and try to manipulate events to their own ends is a scary thought, but given man's dependence on technology, an altogether plausible theory.
|
|
|
Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |