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The Terminal Man

  • 1974
  • 15
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
The Terminal Man (1974)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:03
1 Video
21 Photos
HorrorSci-FiThriller

Hoping to cure his blackout seizures which turn him temporarily extremely violent, a computer scientist agrees to an experimental brain computer chip implant surgery.Hoping to cure his blackout seizures which turn him temporarily extremely violent, a computer scientist agrees to an experimental brain computer chip implant surgery.Hoping to cure his blackout seizures which turn him temporarily extremely violent, a computer scientist agrees to an experimental brain computer chip implant surgery.

  • Director
    • Mike Hodges
  • Writers
    • Michael Crichton
    • Mike Hodges
  • Stars
    • George Segal
    • Joan Hackett
    • Richard Dysart
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mike Hodges
    • Writers
      • Michael Crichton
      • Mike Hodges
    • Stars
      • George Segal
      • Joan Hackett
      • Richard Dysart
    • 45User reviews
    • 56Critic reviews
    • 41Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Terminal Man
    Trailer 3:03
    The Terminal Man

    Photos21

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    George Segal
    George Segal
    • Harry Benson
    Joan Hackett
    Joan Hackett
    • Dr. Janet Ross
    Richard Dysart
    Richard Dysart
    • Dr. John Ellis
    • (as Richard A. Dysart)
    Donald Moffat
    Donald Moffat
    • Dr. Arthur McPherson
    Michael C. Gwynne
    Michael C. Gwynne
    • Dr. Robert Morris
    William Hansen
    William Hansen
    • Dr. Ezra Manon
    Jill Clayburgh
    Jill Clayburgh
    • Angela Black
    Norman Burton
    Norman Burton
    • Det. Capt. Anders
    • (as Normann Burton)
    James Sikking
    James Sikking
    • Ralph Friedman
    Matt Clark
    Matt Clark
    • Gerhard
    Jim Antonio
    Jim Antonio
    • Richards
    Gene Borkan
    • Benson's Guard
    Burke Byrnes
    • Benson's Guard
    Jordan Rhodes
    Jordan Rhodes
    • Questioner No. 1
    Dee Carroll
    Dee Carroll
    • Night Nurse
    Jason Wingreen
    Jason Wingreen
    • Instructor
    Steve Kanaly
    Steve Kanaly
    • Edmonds
    Al Checco
    Al Checco
    • Farley
    • Director
      • Mike Hodges
    • Writers
      • Michael Crichton
      • Mike Hodges
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    5.62.7K
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    Featured reviews

    4SnoopyStyle

    a slow grind

    Harry Benson (George Segal) suffers from increasing seizures and blackouts. The latest incident has him almost killing two people. He's a computer scientist specializing in AI. His sincere prediction is that computers will conquer humanity. He is joining experimental surgeries to implant electronics into his brain but there are some unexpected complications.

    This is a Michael Crichton book. The prolific writer has some big ideas but it often takes a good adaptation to inject a compelling narrative. This movie doesn't have it. The story is drawn-out and slow-moving. The surgery takes forever and generates little tension. The second half tries to turn into something else. By then, most people would have already lost interest. This movie may work better if it skips a lot of the surgery minutia. The story may have some social commentary to make but it's just too darn slow.
    5AaronCapenBanner

    Haywire & Empty Thriller.

    Based on the Michael Crichton novel, this adaptation(directed by "Get Carter" Mike Hodges) tells the story of computer programmer Harry Benson, who, in an attempt to cure his brain seizures, agrees to an experiment where he has micro-computers implanted in his brain, in order to correct the faulty brain chemistry. Things don't go as planned when his new mind starts to get pleasure from the violent impulses he now feels, and so escapes from the hospital, starting a desperate manhunt to prevent him from murdering anyone, and of course to cover-up the scientific failure.

    George Segal is believable as Harry, and the rest of the cast is fine, and though Mike Hodges tries, this film is simply too dreary and downbeat to succeed, and by the end, there doesn't seem to have been any discernible point to it all.
    6bgaiv

    NOT a thriller, but pretty good as long as you know what to expect

    This movie has a unique tone that's hard to define. "Bleak" comes to mind but is inadequate. It's as if Bleak came alive and made an even bleaker movie.

    That's one thing you need to know going in. The other is not that it's slow, but that it spends a ridiculous amount of time on the fictitious surgery. For example, the doctor almost hits a vein in the patient's brain which would have killed him. However, a surgical mistake can happen in any sort of surgery and this lengthy bit doesn't address the far more interesting ethical issues.

    This is in contrast to The Andromeda Strain. In that film, there are enormously detailed and lengthy scenes of the Wildfire lab. But the difference is that movie was more about the scientists and the lab than the germ itself. Here, that's just not the case.

    There's other parts of the film that provide a weird atmosphere yet seem entirely irrelevant. The doctor goes to a strip club to find Segal and while I like the music played, it's hard to see why this is here considering it's mostly focused on the stripper stage.

    The far more interesting issues are of course the ethical ones.

    The treatment they give this man is directly compared to lobotomies, a very dark page of medical history. After they install the device, they start activating different electrodes to see what happens... this isn't that much different than the lobotomy performed on Rosemary Kennedy where they kept cutting while talking to her to see the effects. It's incredibly chilling and plausible.

    A curiosity here is that there is essentially an ad for Scientology on the radio in the background in one scene. This makes sense considering their disdain for psychiatry which was rather well founded at least at the time.

    There's frustration here in that one huge theme seems to have been all but ignored-- that the patient was convinced computers would take over. I suppose the idea might have been that Segal was increasingly acting robotic... in several scenes when he's walking he does seem like a mindless drone. But I just saw him as a zonked out zombie and zombies are standard horror fare. It didn't occur to me that that might have been the idea until I was writing this review.

    Anyway, it's a fascinating watch as long as you know what you're getting into. It's definitely NOT a thriller. There are many striking visuals, like a long curious zoom on a parrot.
    bulk-15

    Time capsule of 70s science

    Although this movie is weak as a 'thriller', its real power is its evocative sense of place and the emotional texture of science as it was seen in the 1970s -- sombre and dystopian, yet strangely attractive.

    The plot centres on a group of scientists and doctors who are pushing the frontiers of neuroscience by implanting a computerized chip in the brain of a man (George Segal) afflicted with terrible seizures. The chip is programmed to shock the patient's brain each time a seizure is about to happen. The effort is prestigious, the technology flawless, and the doctors, scientists and technicians react to the initial success of the project with a certain conceited arrogance. Only when the the chip malfunctions, and the patient breaks out of the hospital and starts killing people, does the veneer of omnipotence and professionalism fall away, revealing in the scientists ambition, uncertainty, and humanity.

    Segal does a good job of portraying the wildly changing emotions of a man who's mind is under the control of a computer. At the push of a button he can be made to laugh, cry, scream, babble like a child, or even become aroused, as the computer chip in his brain explores his mental map. It's a study that would be interesting to fans of Oliver Sacks.

    The most interesting moments of the movie are the early ones, where the patient interacts with his dispassionate doctors in the sterile, streamlined chromium world of the hospital. The doctors and scientists seem like mechanical, perfected reflections of the technologies that surround them. The messy humanity of the patient, demonstrated through humour, fear, weakness and anger, stands in contrast to his surroundings, and it is not surprising to the audience when he disappears from his hospital room.

    Scenes of the doctors in tuxedos and evening gowns at a dinner party while a shiny computer console monitors their ailing patient lend the robotic professionals a strange, formal humanity, at the same moment in the movie when their own fallibility begins to be revealed. Both technology and technologists promise perfection, and in the end both are revealed as imperfect and unable to overcome the challenges of the human condition - sickness, insanity, violence and death.

    Once the patient leaves the hospital, the movie shifts to a more conventional 'crazed murderer' theme, and things become less interesting. It is this shift that cripples Terminal Man and prevents it from being the science fiction classic it might have been. The movie closes with a disappointing, clichéd 'Big Brother' riff on mind control and the future.

    This is still a movie worth watching, however, if only to get a glimpse of how the 1970s saw the near future. There are endless details for the technophile, from absurdly technological architecture to atomic batteries to ancient video terminals to mainframe computers to futuristic touchtone telephones. The technological landscape is presented with a glistening newness that evokes movies like The Anderson Tapes, Coma, Westworld, and The Andromeda Strain (the last three of which, like Terminal Man, were written by Michael Crichton). The set design and the soundtrack (mostly Bach, No. 25 in the Goldberg Variations) create an inviting, peaceful sense of space that stands at odds with the tension of the plot. The clean, elegant world of Terminal Man is one in which you would want to live.

    Watch Terminal Man for the sets, for the music, and for its nostalgic sense of a forgotten future. Back in the 70s, this was the future everyone was expecting, if not hoping to find right around the corner. Like Andromeda Strain, Coma and the Anderson Tapes, Terminal Man is less a thriller and more a cultural time capsule. Get comfortable in your beanbag chair, turn on the lava lamp, and enjoy.
    6Coventry

    Violent seizures and slow pacing don't mix very well

    I'm a big admirer of the writer Michael Crichton. Perhaps I'm a bigger admirer of his work than I am a fan of it, if that makes sense. I admire and tremendously respect Crichton because he was one of the sole Sci-Fi writers in history able to create an almost entirely new sub genre and yet remain creative and versatile within that sub genre. Even though his finest stories like "The Andromeda Strain", "Westworld", "The Terminal Man" and even "Jurassic Park" are seemingly very differing tales, they basically do share the same basic concept, namely artificial technology and/or science that develops and turns into a giant menace to the same human that created it. I'm also a big admirer of Michael Crichton because he was a very intelligent person – probably one of the only Sci- Fi/thriller novelists with a Harvard Medical School degree – and thus knew very well what he was writing about. The films he directed, as well as the ones adapted from his novels, are often extremely complex, talkative and stuffed with professional jargon. That's not because he was pretentious, but because he was an expert. Crichton referred to "The Terminal Man" as the worst adaptation of his work, but maybe that has to do with personal resentment because he was initially set to adapt his own novel and direct, but got fired by the directors.

    "The Terminal Man" is everything but a bad film, although it's fairly easy to see why many people dislike it. The brief plot description promises an exciting concept of a man suffering from psychosis who agrees to participate in a scientific/medical experiment in which a tiny computer is implanted in his brain that will keep his violent impulses under control. Although seemingly successful at first, the man's brain somehow becomes addicted to the little shocks that the electrodes are sending out, resulting in the triggering of even more violent impulses. If you read it like this, "The Terminal Man" sounds like a tense, exciting and action-packed thriller, but instead it's actually a slow-brooding, atmospheric and integer drama. It all is a bit misleading perhaps… The premise speaks of "A man suffering from a mental condition that often causes him to become homicidal", but we are only introduced to Harry Benson when he obediently awaits the operation and remains very calm and docile at all times. There are only a few photographs to indicate his violent nature. Then the operation itself is almost shown integrally, which raises the impression to last forever. Then, finally, the plot describes how Benson – and I quote – "escapes from the hospital and goes on a spree of violence and murder". Well, first of all, there's a long period of time between the operation and the escape in which barely anything happens. The so-called spree of violence and murder is somewhat exaggerated as well, since Benson only commits one murder (although admittedly a very savage one). However, to compensate for the lack of action, we do receive – next to the intelligent and tense script – a continuous series of extraordinary beautiful camera angles, compositions and set-pieces. Director Mike Hodges ("Get Carter", "Pulp") literally turns the film into a work of art, with stunning cinematography and exquisite use of classical music. I honestly wished for "The Terminal Man" to benefice from a faster pacing, a bit more background to Harry Benson's character, a bit less medical mambo-jumbo and a few more brutish murders.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Crichton was fired from writing the screenplay due to the fact that his script did not follow the novel (which he had written) closely enough.
    • Goofs
      At the cemetery, the usual mechanism for lowering the coffin into the grave is missing. There aren't even any straps in place to lower it manually.
    • Quotes

      Benson: [mumbles]

      Dr. John Ellis: [operating on Benson] What was that?

      Dr. Robert Morris: Patient.

      Dr. John Ellis: You all right, Mr. Benson?

      Benson: [groggily] Fine... fine...

      Dr. John Ellis: Any pain?

      Benson: No...

      Dr. John Ellis: Good. Just relax now.

      Benson: You too doctor...

    • Alternate versions
      On its release at 2003 Edinburgh Film Festival, there was a director's cut which Hodges had cut out the beginning with the doctor looking at photographs of Harry Benson.
    • Connections
      Featured in Cinemacabre TV Trailers (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      Goldberg Variation No. 25
      by Johann Sebastian Bach (as J.S. Bach)

      Played by Glenn Gould

      Courtesy Columbia Records

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 19, 1974 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El hombre terminal
    • Filming locations
      • Forest Lawn Memorial Park - 1712 S Glendale Avenue, Glendale, California, USA(cemetery)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $224,542
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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