Although British
production designer-turned-director Robert Fuest won lasting affection from the
genre-cinema community by making a pair of stylish and weird Vincent Price
thrillers, The Abominable Dr. Phibes
(1971) and Dr. Phibes Rises Again
(1973), the rest of his oeuvre is spotty. For instance, the sci-fi thriller The Final Programme should have been
Fuest’s magnum opus, because he served as writer, director, and designer, adapting
the bizarre narrative from UK sci-fi scribe Michael Moorcock’s novel of the
same name. Alas, the lighthearted eccentricity that makes the Phibes movies so enjoyable works against
Fuest here. Although it’s plain the picture was at least partly envisioned as a
satire, Fuest’s script is so confusing, overwrought, and silly that it’s hard
for viewers to grasp the basic chain of events, much less what any of the
strange things happening onscreen are supposed to mean. The Final Programme has a certain gonzo energy, and many scenes
explode with dynamism in terms of inventive cinematography and resourceful
production design. Yet the sum is less than the parts.
The story’s unlikely
protagonist is Jerry Cornelius (Jon Finch), a Nobel Prize-winning scientist who
behaves and dresses like a spoiled rock star, wearing flamboyant outfits and
boozing 24/7. After Jerry’s father dies, Jerry is approached by various parties
interested in an experiment that Jerry’s father left unfinished, so Jerry is
pressured to surrender microfilm hidden in the family estate. Meanwhile, Jerry
has learned from his spiritual advisor (Hugh Griffith) that the world is going
to end soon, so Jerry plans to amuse himself by blowing up the family estate
with napalm. Hence the peculiar scene of Jerry visiting an arms dealer in a
giant room decorated like the inside of a pinball machine and filled with go-go
dancers rolling around in massive ball-shaped bubbles. Another random subplot
involves Jerry attempting to free his sister (Sarah Douglas) from captivity,
because she’s held hostage by a third sibling (Derrik O’Connor), who keeps the
sister drugged. This situation occasions a gunfight between Jerry and his
brother, during which the combatants use space-age needleguns instead of regular
pistols.
Jerry also becomes involved with a covert organization headed by
people including the cannibalistic Miss Brunner (Jenny Runacre), since the
organization needs Jerry’s help for an experiment (or, in the movie’s parlance,
“programme”) designed to create a new life form that can replace humankind. And
if you’re not already bewildered, there’s also a kicky scene featuring a crazed
ex-military officer, Major Wrongway Lindbergh (Sterling Hayden), who sells
Jerry an antique plane for the proposed napalm strafing.
None of this makes
sense, and Fuest utterly fails to situate the viewer with a clear understanding
of the story’s circumstances. Is this the distant future or the near future or
simply an alternate reality? Are Jerry and the other scientists inane or
visionary? Is the whole thing a send-up of trippy sci-fi, or a serious speculative
story with a whimsical attitude? Best not to worry about such questions.
Watched casually, The Final Programme
presents a string of distracting vignettes, some of which are funny (e.g., the
climactic battle, during which the “hero” pathetically shouts, “Help! I’m
losing!”), and some of which are astonishingly stupid (notably the goofy final
scene). FYI, The Final Programme was
released in the US as The Last Days of
Man on Earth, which promises a lot more large-scale excitement than the
movie actually delivers.
The Final Programme: FUNKY
1 comment:
It's such a terrible film. But the four-volume Cornelius Chronicles are worth a read, if only for an insight into the male hip sixties mindset.
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