THX 1138
THX 1138 | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | George Lucas |
Produced by |
Edward Folger Lawrence Sturhahn Francis Ford Coppola |
Written by |
George Lucas Walter Murch |
Starring |
Robert Duvall Donald Pleasence Don Pedro Colley Maggie McOmie Ian Wolfe |
Music by | Lalo Schifrin |
Cinematography |
David Myers Albert Kihn |
Edited by |
George Lucas Walter Murch (sound) |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release dates | March 11, 1971 |
Running time |
86 minutes (1971 studio cut) 88 minutes (2004 director's cut) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $777,777.77[1][2] |
Box office | $2,437,000 |
THX 1138 is a 1971 science fiction film directed by George Lucas in his feature directorial debut. The film was produced by Francis Ford Coppola and written by Lucas and Walter Murch. It stars Robert Duvall and Donald Pleasence and depicts a dystopian future in which the populace is controlled through android police officers and mandatory use of drugs that suppress emotion, including sexual desire.
THX 1138 was developed from Lucas' student film Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB, which he made in 1967 while attending the University of Southern California's film school. The feature film was produced in a joint venture between Warner Brothers and Francis Ford Coppola's production company, American Zoetrope. A novelization by Ben Bova was published in 1971. The film received mixed reviews from critics and failed to find box office success on initial release; however, the film has subsequently received critical acclaim over the years and gained a cult following, particularly in the aftermath of Lucas' success with Star Wars in 1977.
Plot
In a city of the future, use of mind-altering drugs is mandatory and sexual intercourse is prohibited. Drugs are critical both in maintaining compliance among the city's residents and also for ensuring their ability to conduct dangerous and demanding tasks for long periods of time. Everyone is clothed in the same white work clothes all the time, except the chrome-faced police androids who wear black, and robe-wearing monks. At their jobs in central video CCTV control centers, SEN 5241 (a man) and LUH 3417 (a woman) keep surveillance on the city. On LUH's face there can be seen clear signs of some emotional distress.
LUH has a male roommate, THX 1138. The two share "nothing but space". He works in a factory producing androids that function as police officers. The work is hazardous as it requires handling explosive and radioactive material. He leaves the job after his shift has ended, while the loudspeakers urge the workers to "increase safety", and congratulate them on their record of "only losing 195 workers" in the last period, to the competing factory's 242.
Returning from work he stops at a telephone booth–like personal Unichapel, one in a row of many, and mumbles prayers about "party" and "masses" while sitting there under the gaze of a wall portrait of a man's face, a being known as "OMM 0910". A soothing voice greets THX and offers to share his problems. OMM ends every confession with a parting salutation: "You are a true believer, blessings of the State, blessings of the masses. Work hard, increase production, prevent accidents and be happy."
Back at home, it's an empty space almost without any fixtures except the in-wall drug cabinet with inbuilt lens, which greets him with "what's wrong?" when he opens the cabinet's door, and offers him medicine to "improve calmness". He takes his drugs, watches a holo-broadcast of a naked dancing African woman in an empty room while engaging with a masturbatory device, then switches to scenes of brutal beating of a person by police officers, afterwards.
LUH alters her drugs intake, ignoring warnings of dangerous "drugs interaction" coming from the lens in the cabinet. She secretly substitutes her pills for THX's medications. THX finds himself experiencing emotions and personal affection for the first time. They engage in love-making. Knowing that their physical relationship is illegal, THX must decide whether to return to using the prescribed drugs, or escape with LUH. He knows that he will not be able to function without his drugs while at his demanding job, but he does not want to lose what he has created with LUH. She suggests an escape out into a "superstructure," but he is indecisive.
THX is confronted by SEN, who uses his position as LUH's superior to change her shift, admitting he wants THX as his new roommate. THX files a complaint against SEN for the illegal shift change. Without drugs in his system, THX falters during critical and hazardous phases of his job, while being monitored by his increasingly concerned supervisor. A control center is alerted to the situation and executes "overriding mindlock" on THX to immobilize him for further arrest for drugs evasion. This occurs at a critical juncture of android construction, which almost leads to a minor nuclear disaster. The control center disavows responsibility for the incident.
THX and LUH are arrested. THX is imprisoned in an area that resembles a white limbo world. He enjoys a brief reunion with LUH—one disrupted by the enforcer robots, not before she reveals to him she is expecting a child. At THX's trial the prosecution demands he be destroyed but the defense argues there still must be some "use" in him. Defense wins. THX is consigned to another region of limbo, this one populated by a collection of other prisoners, including SEN. Knowing that THX filed the complaint against him, SEN nevertheless rallies him to join his undescribed cause.
Most of the prisoners seem uninterested in escape, but eventually THX and SEN decide to find an exit. They encounter SRT 5752, who starred in the holo-broadcasts. SRT says he has tired of "being a hologram" and wants "to be a real person" now. Exiting their unguarded prison, THX and SRT are separated from SEN. Controllers in the city learn of the escape. A budget of 14,000 credits is allotted for their recapture. Chased by the robots, THX and SRT are trapped in a control center, from which THX learns that LUH has been "consumed", possibly for organ reclamation (since bodies discovered earlier had, as SRT put it, their "insides...gone") and her name reassigned to fetus 66691 in a growth chamber. This suggests that she has been declared "incurable", before ultimately being "used".
Alone and hunted, SEN makes a tentative exploration of the limits of the city's underground network. Cowed by what he sees, he finds his way to an area reserved for the monks of OMM. Alone, SEN prays directly to OMM - which is a wall–sized portrait in an abandoned TV studio - before being confronted by a lone monk who notices that SEN has no identification badge. SEN attacks him before the monk can report him. Returning to the "central web", SEN wanders into a child-rearing area, strikes up a conversation with children and then sits aimlessly there until police androids apprehend him without a fight.
THX and SRT escape and steal two cars, but SRT crashes his into a concrete pillar. Pursued by two police androids on motorcycles, THX in his car flees to the limits of the city. Abandoning his car, THX eventually locates a ventilation shaft leading to the surface. The police pursue him up an escape ladder, but are ordered by central command to cease pursuit, even though close to capturing him, as the expense of his capture exceeds their pre-determined budget by 6%. It is then revealed that the city is entirely underground, as he stands before a giant red setting sun in the evening sky, seeing this view for the very first time in his life.
Cast
- Robert Duvall as THX 1138
- Donald Pleasence as SEN 5241
- Don Pedro Colley as the hologram SRT
- Maggie McOmie as LUH 3417
- Ian Wolfe as the old prisoner PTO
- Marshall Efron as prisoner TWA
- Sid Haig as prisoner NCH
- John Pearce as prisoner DWY
- James Wheaton as the voice of OMM 0910
Production
THX 1138 was the first film made in a planned seven-picture slate commissioned by Warner Brothers from the 1969 incarnation of American Zoetrope.[4][5] Lucas wrote the initial script draft himself based on his earlier short film, but Coppola and Lucas agreed it was unsatisfactory. Murch assisted Lucas to write an improved final draft.[1][6] For some of SEN's dialogue in the film, the script included excerpts from speeches by Richard Nixon.[7]
The script required almost the entire cast to shave their heads, either completely bald or with a buzz cut. As a publicity stunt, several actors were filmed having their first haircuts/shaves at unusual venues, with the results used in a promotional featurette titled Bald: The Making of THX 1138. Many of the shaven-headed extras seen in the film were recruited from the nearby addiction recovery program Synanon.[8]
Filming began on September 22, 1969.[9] The schedule was between 35[1] and 40[10] days, completing in November 1969. Lucas filmed THX 1138 in Techniscope.[11]
Most locations for filming were in the San Francisco area,[12] including the then-unfinished tunnels of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) subway system,[1][12] the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,[1] the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, the Lawrence Hall of Science, Berkeley, the San Francisco International Airport and at a remote manipulator for a hot cell. Studio sequences were shot at stages in Los Angeles, including a white stage 100 feet long by 150 feet wide for the "white limbo" sequences.[1]
The chase scene featured Lola T70 Mk.IIIs with dummy turbine engines racing against Yamaha TA125/250cc 2-stroke race replica motorcycles through two San Francisco Bay Area automotive tunnels: the Caldecott Tunnel between Oakland and Orinda,[1] and the underwater Posey Tube between Oakland and Alameda.[1] According to Caleb Deschanel, cars drove at speeds of 140 mph while filming the chase.[1]
The chase featured a spectacular motorcycle stunt: Stuntman Ronald "Duffy" Hambleton (credited as Duffy Hamilton), rode his police motorcycle full speed into a fallen paint stand, with a ramp built to Hambleton's specification,[1] flew over the handlebars, was hit by the airborne motorcycle, landed in the street on his back, and slammed into the crashed car in which Duvall's character had escaped—evidently the subject of a comment by Lucas detailing a "motorcycle disaster" during the filming. According to the film's commentary, everyone at the location was stunned and immediately ran in to ensure Hambleton was alright. According to Lucas, it turned out Hambleton was perfectly fine, apart from being angry with the people who had run into the shot to check on him. He was worried that they might have ruined the amazing stunt he had just performed by walking into frame.
THX's final climb out to the daylight was filmed (with the camera rotated 90 degrees) in the incomplete (and decidedly horizontal) Bay Area Rapid Transit Transbay Tube before installation of the track supports, with the actors using exposed reinforcing bars on the floor of the tunnel as a "ladder".[1] The end scene, of THX standing before the sunset, was shot at Port Hueneme, California, by a second unit of (additional uncredited photographer) Caleb Deschanel and Matthew Robbins, who played THX in this long shot.[1]
After completion of photography, Coppola scheduled a year for Lucas to complete post-production.[13] Lucas edited the film on a German-made K-E-M flatbed editor in his Mill Valley house by day, with Walter Murch editing sound at night; the two would compare notes when they changed over.[1][13] Murch compiled and synchronized the sound montage, which includes all the "overhead" voices heard throughout the film—radio chatter, announcements, etc. The bulk of the editing was finished by mid-1970.
On completion of editing of the film, producer Coppola took it to financiers Warner Brothers. Studio executives there disliked the film, and insisted that Coppola turn over the negative to an in-house Warners editor, who cut approximately 4 minutes of the film prior to release.[14]
Reception
THX 1138 was released to theaters on March 11, 1971 and was initially commercially unsuccessful, earning back $945,000 in rentals for Warner Bros, but still leaving the studio in the red.[14] Critical reception was mixed at the time of its release. A contemporary survey of reviews found 7 favourable, 3 mixed, and 5 negative.[15]
The film, however, started to receive positive reviews over the years and gained critical acclaim. As of 2014, the film is rated "fresh" on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes with a score of 90% and an average rating of 7/10. The consensus reads, "George Lucas' feature debut presents a spare, bleak, dystopian future, and features evocatively minimal set design and creepy sound effects."[16]
Versions
In 1977, after the success of Star Wars, THX 1138 was re-released with the footage that had been deleted by Warner Bros. edited back in, but still did not gain popularity.[17] This version was subsequently released on laserdisc and VHS, but has not been released on DVD or Blu-ray.
In 2004, The George Lucas Director's Cut of the film was released. Lucas shot new footage for the film, computer-generated imagery was used to modify scenes by expanding crowds, settings and backgrounds and adding digital characters, and audio/video restoration techniques were applied to the film.[18][19] These changes increased the run time of the film by two minutes. This director's cut was released to a limited number of digital-projection theaters on September 10, 2004, and then on DVD on September 14, 2004. A Blu-ray edition was released on September 7, 2010.[20] At that time, the film received an "R" rating by the MPAA, due to the changes to the ratings system since the original release (the original film was rated "GP," later changed to "PG.") It is the only film directed by Lucas to carry an "R" rating.
The 1971 studio cut version has never been released on any home media format.
Novelization
A novelization based on the movie was written by Ben Bova and published in 1971.[21] It follows the plot of the movie closely, with four notable additions:
- There is an additional character, Control, who is the accountant-like ultimate administrator of the City. Several passages depict the events from his point of view.
- After having sex with LUH 3417, THX 1138 consults a psychologist and admits everything. This psychologist transfers the confession to Control, leading to the overriding mindlock and arrest in the factory.
- LUH 3417's trial and death are depicted first-hand from her point of view, and from that of Control.
- Instead of climbing outside to witness a sunset, THX 1138 climbs up and spends the night in the superstructure, and exits in the morning to find other humans living outside.
Origin of the name
The significance of the name THX 1138 has been the subject of much speculation. In an interview for the DVD compilation Reel Talent, which included Lucas's original 4EB short, Lucas stated that he chose the letters and numbers for their aesthetic qualities, especially their symmetry.[22] According to the book Cinema by the Bay, published by George Lucas Books, Lucas named the film after his telephone number while in college: 849-1138 - the letters THX correspond to the numbers 8,4 and 9 on the keypad.[23] Walter Murch states in the DVD's audio commentary that he always believed Lucas intended THX to be "sex", LUH to be "love", and SEN to be "sin".[7] John Lithgow, in "The Film School Generation" segment of the DVD series American Cinema, described the title THX 1138 as "reading like a license plate number."[24]
In popular culture
Lucasfilm references
- The yellow hot rod driven by Paul Le Mat in Lucas' 1973 film American Graffiti shows the license plate THX 138.[25]
- In Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker, the 1976 tie-in novelisation of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, a Stormtrooper is referred to as THX 1138.
- In 1977's Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, Luke Skywalker gives the fictitious location of the cell block from which he is transferring Chewbacca as "one-one-three-eight".
- In Star Wars: The Clone Wars season 3 episode 1 "Clone Cadets", one training programme is called THX-1138.
- The THX sound certification system, originated in 1982, is sometimes said to be derived from THX 1138, and also from the system's originator, sound engineer Tomlinson Holman, as 'Tomlinson Holman's eXperiment'.
- In the video game Maniac Mansion (released by Lucasfilm Games in 1987), the license plate on the Edsel in the garage reads "THX 1138".
- In the video game Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders (released by Lucasfilm Games in 1988), the title character owes $1138 to the phone company and another has a net worth of the same amount.
- In the video game Star Wars Galactic Battlegrounds (first released in 2001), selecting a Stormtrooper soldier (Galactic Empire faction) occasionally results in his reply "THX 1138 ready, sir!"
- In Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode III, during a skit involving a gathering of bounty hunters, the assassin droid IG-88 introduces his cousin THX-1138, who greets the room with the famous THX Deep Note.
- In the video game Star Wars: Republic Commando, 1138 is the name of the leader of "Delta Squad".
Audio samples
- "Asbestos Lead Asbestos" and several remixes of the same track by Meat Beat Manifesto include a sample of the medicine cabinet which asks, "What's wrong?" when opened outside the normal dosage time.
- "Omega Amigo" by The Shamen, on their 1990 album En-Tact, samples the voice in the prayer booth ("my time is yours").
- "My Time Is Yours" by L.S.G. (Oliver Lieb, 1995) samples it as well
- 1991's "Man Amplified" and "Memories of Sound" by Clock DVA contain samples.[26]
- The song "Regime of Coincidence, State of Gravity" on Laibach's 1992 album Kapital is made up nearly entirely of samples from THX 1138.
- The opening sounds of "Mr. Self Destruct" on the Nine Inch Nails 1994 album The Downward Spiral is a sample from THX 1138 in which a man is being beaten by a prison guard.[27]
- The 2005 Corrupt Souls & Hyx's Drum n Bass Track “1138”, found on the Black Sun Empire double album Cruel & Unusual, uses several samples from THX 1138, including “What's Wrong?”.[28]
- The track "I Need Something Stronger" on Unkle's 2005 release Edit Music for a Film: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Reconstruction is almost entirely composed of THX 1138 samples. (The packaging artwork for the album also borrows heavily from the THX 1138 2004 DVD release packaging.[29])
- The song "Psy-Storm" on Decoded Feedback's 2005 album Combustion consists of THX 1138 samples.
- "Out there somewhere" by Orbital, on their 1996 album In Sides, samples the voice in the medicine cabinet ("What's wrong?").
- Several samples are used in Front 242's Geography album.
Imagery
- The lyric content of Toto's 1979 single release "99" was inspired by THX-1138's society, in which people are given numbers instead of names. The music video features the band in an all-white room dressed in white, a set piece inspired by the film's "limbo".[30]
- The music video for Queen's 1982 release "Calling All Girls" features Freddie Mercury dressed all in white in a stark white setting with robot police performing tests on him until the band rescues him.
- The music video for Gangstarr's 1997 single "You Know my Steez", directed by Terry Heller, is a faithful homage to THX 1138, from the costuming and iconic cinematography to an upside-down miniature BART tunnel and the duplication of the famous extreme telephoto sunset ending.[31]
- In the 1997 film Gattaca, the staircase in the Gattaca space center resembles the staircase in the underground city of THX 1138. Both films were shot in the Marin County Civic Center, with many similar shots visually.
- The album cover for Daft Punk's 2013 single, "Get Lucky", was inspired by THX 1138's iconic ending scene.
Letters/numbers
- The intro sequence for each episode of Pinky and the Brain shows The Brain writing equations on a blackboard, one of which is "THX=1138".
- In the 2012 movie Iron Sky, Renate writes the number 1138 on the Moon Nazi helmet at the end.
- Two androids in the sci-fi anime series "Eve no Jikan" are called LUH and THX; the series refers to "Law 1138."
- The music video for the song "I Have the Touch" by Peter Gabriel is based on the movie.
- In "Futurama" season 7, episode 22, "Leela and the Genestalk", the name of the redneck bar is "TEX 1138's."
- In the Dexter's Laboratory episode "Blackfoot and Slim," the tag that the observation team places on Dexter's ear reads "1138."
- In the movie John Doe Vigilante, the prisoner number of John Doe is "8311 XHT"
Other
- The Atari home computer video game Star Raiders, first released in 1979, responds to unknown keyboard commands with the status message "WHAT'S WRONG?", which is a reference to THX 1138.[32]
- The Xbox 360 (PS3 only Australia and in the EU) video game Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon has an achievement called THQ 1138, referencing THX 1138 as well as referencing THQ, the game company that owned the series at the time of its release.
See also
- Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB
- Utopian and dystopian fiction
- List of films featuring surveillance
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 Artifact from the Future: The Making of THX 1138 (DVD [on the bonus disk accompanying THX 1138: The George Lucas Director's Cut]). USA: Warner Bros. 2004.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.89. Seven was Coppola's lucky number.
- ↑ Compare with this image from IMDb.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.88.
- ↑ Louise Sweeney, "The Movie Business is alive and well and living in San Francisco", Show, April 1970.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.89.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Lucas 2004.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.92.
- ↑ Lawrence Sturhahn, "Genesis of THX-1138: Notes on a Production", Kansas Quarterly, Spring 1972.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.90, 280.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.90.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Pollock 1983, p.91.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Pollock 1983, p.96.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Pollock 1983, p.97.
- ↑ "THX 1138", FilmFacts, Vol XIV, No.7, 1971.
- ↑ "THX 1138". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2013-04-08.
- ↑ Pollock 1983, p.98.
- ↑ Alternate Versions of the film at the Internet Movie Database
- ↑ "THX 1138 (1971) - Changes", Maverick Media. Retrieved 2012-09-24.
- ↑ Calonge, Juan (May 10, 2010). "Warner Announces Sci-Fi Blu-ray Wave". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ↑ http://www.amazon.com/THX-1138-Ben-Bova/dp/0446897116
- ↑ Reel Talent: First Films by Legendary Directors, DVD, 20th Century Fox, 2007
- ↑ Sheerly Avni (2006). Cinema By The Bay (Hardcover ed.). New York, NY: George Lucas Books. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-932183-88-7.
- ↑ Lithgow, John (host) (1995). American Cinema: The Film School Generation (Television Production).
- ↑ Lucas, George (1978). American Graffiti: A Screenplay- The Complete Scenarios of the film with 70 illustrations. Grove Press. ISBN 0-394-17072-5.
- ↑ "Clock DVA Samples". Aracnet.com. 2004-01-05. Retrieved 2011-08-26.
- ↑ "Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral at Discogs". Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ "Corrupt Souls Feat. Hyx – 1138 / Skullfucked, Black Sun Empire.". Retrieved 2012-08-15.
- ↑ Discjunkie.se
- ↑ "Toto official website: Band History". Toto99.com. 1992-08-05. Retrieved 2009-12-13.
- ↑ Gangstarr - You Know My Steez on YouTube
- ↑ "Star Raiders, by Doug Neubauer. Trivia about Atari Star Raiders". Retrieved 2010-03-30.
Sources
- Pollock, Dale (1983). Skywalking: The Life and Films of George Lucas. London: Elm Tree Books. ISBN 0-241-11034-3.
- Lucas, George (Director) (2004). THX 1138 (The George Lucas Director's Cut Two-Disc Special Edition) (DVD). USA: Warner Bros. ISBN 0-7907-6526-8.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: THX 1138 |
- THX 1138 at Lucasfilm
.com - THX 1138 at the Internet Movie Database
- DVD THX forum
- Interview with Don Pedro Colley about his experiences working on THX 1138 at LucasFan.com
- White on White Village Voice review April 8, 1971
- THX 1138 at Rotten Tomatoes
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