An abysmal conspiracy/sci-fi
thriller that features a numbing combination of incoherent storytelling and
undercooked concepts, The Brain Machine is
a deeply confusing movie. The discombobulated narrative begins when a doctor
flees a hospital with secret files in his possession. Next, the film depicts a
nefarious government experiment that the doctor tries to impede even as secret
agents hunt him down. Yet what should be a simple suspense story plays out as a
bewildering mess, because the filmmakers fail to provide bedrock elements such
as an explanation of what the government experiment is designed to accomplish.
Moreover, the picture lacks anything resembling suspense, since it contains
endless scenes of characters either reclining on lawn furniture or engaging in
nonsensical philosophical debates. Somewhere in the muck, it becomes evident
that a number of civilians have been recruited to participate in the experiment
because they don't have close family ties, meaning they're expendable (or
something like that). Beyond that, it’s anybody’s guess. Among the actors
playing the participants are future TV notables James Best (later to appear on The Dukes of Hazard) and Gerald McRaney
(later to star in Simon & Simon).
Best plays a haunted priest given to enigmatic musings like this one: “If I
could hear the music I heard when I was young, I wouldn’t be out of step.”
McRaney, virtually unrecognizable without his trademark moustache, mostly makes
vituperative declarations stemming from some unexplained brand of righteous
indignation. Very little actually happens in The Brain Machine, except for some violence in flashbacks and a
vignette of a fellow getting electrocuted. Suffice to say, the organ mentioned
in the title of The Brain Machine is
not one that the movie engages.
The
Brain Machine: SQUARE
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