Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1968


The Power (1968 film)

Buy The Power (1968 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The Power' is a 1968 American Tech noir, science fiction thriller film from MGM, produced by George Pal, directed by Byron Haskin (his final film), that stars George Hamilton and Suzanne Pleshette. It is based on the 1956 science fiction novel 'The Power' by Frank M. Robinson.

The storyline concerns a hunt to find a man who seems the ability to control or slay others with their minds.

Plot



The Committee on Human Endurance researches the human body's ability to survive pain and physical stress as part of the space program. Dr. Henry Hallson, an anthropologist on the committee, has designed a series of anonymous questionnaires to screen people with greater survival capacity, using other committee members as preliminary subjects.

Hallson reveals his findings at a meeting with chairman and biologist Dr. Jim Tanner, geneticist Dr. Margery Lansing, physicist Dr. Carl Melnicker, biologist Dr. Talbot Scott, Dr. Norman Van Zandt, and government liaison Arthur Nordlund. Hallson announces that someone on the committee possesses a super-intellect beyond human measurement, capable of controlling other human minds, including those of the committee. When no one admits to having Hallson's theorized powers, Dr. Melnicker suggests a telekinesis test using a simple psi wheel. Stating that the test subject will never reveal himself, Hallson insists that all of them concentrate on it together, which sends the wheel spinning.

Later that night, Hallson is found murdered in the laboratory's human centrifuge, with the name "Adam Hart" scrawled on a piece of paper in his office. Hallson's widow Sally Hallson tells Jim Tanner that "Adam Hart" was the name of her husband's childhood friend. Tanner speculates that a superhuman could exist with capabilities far in advance of normal humans, but Talbot Scott denies the possibility.

As the police investigate Hallson's murder, Tanner immediately becomes the prime suspect when it is found that he apparently lied about his distinguished academic credentials. In fact, all records documenting his past have been inexplicably erased. Tanner then suffers bizarre hallucinations and narrowly survives a psychic assault on his life. Desperate to uncover the truth, he travels to Hallson's hometown and learns that Adam Hart is a superhuman, with different people providing different descriptions of his appearance and others still obeying commands that Hart gave them years earlier.

As Tanner and Lansing search for the other committee members, Melnicker is murdered while Nordlund apparently survives another psychic assault by Hart. Dr. Van Zandt is revealed to be an ally of Hart, but is also murdered. Surviving yet another attack, Tanner returns to the research center and confronts Talbot Scott with the police close behind. Scott believes that Tanner is a superhuman and pleads for his life, but panics and is shot by the police.

In a final showdown, Tanner confronts Arthur Nordlund, who faked his own attack and is revealed to be Adam Hart. Hart unleashes another psychic assault on Tanner, but Tanner instead kills Hart with his own awakened psychic powers. Tanner realizes that 'he' was the superhuman uncovered by Hallson's tests, and that Hart was trying to eliminate any competition from others like himself.

Cast



Production



The novel by Frank M. Robinson was published in 1956 (it was his first novelChicago Scene of New Novel of Suspense

Reinsberg, Mark. Chicago Daily Tribune 6 May 1956: c10.
) and had already been filmed for television in 1956.

In June 1964 it was announced that MGM bought the screen rights to the novel for George Pal to produce. John Gay was writing the script.Singing Discovery in 'Major, Private'

Los Angeles Times 5 June 1964: C12.
Harve Presnell Signs for Non-Singing Role

Los Angeles Times 9 June 1964: C8.


The source novel's plot was substantially changed in John Gay's screenplay, moving the location to San Marino, California, changing most of the characters' names (although retaining the surnames of Tanner, Nordlund, and department head Professor Van Zandt), and eliminating several subplots and characters, presumably to fit the film's 108-minute run time.

In September 1964 Pal announced his slate of pictures for MGM were 'The Power', 'The Disappearance', 'Arabian Nights' and 'Odd John'.'King Rat' Sparks Invasion by British: Pal's 'Odd John' Sci-Fic; 'Crossbow' at Crossroads

Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times 17 Sep 1964: C13.


In March 1965 Pal said MGM wanted a star to play the lead in 'The Power' but "that would ruin the basis for the story because no one is supposed to know who 'the power' is."Eleanor Bron Finds Favor With Beatles: Moptops Busy in Bahamas; Pal's All-Technique Movie

Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times5 Mar 1965: C11.
In January 1966 Pal was reportedly discussing the film with Cliff Robertson.'Whiskers' on 20th Slate

Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 12 Jan 1966: c13.


In June 1966 George Pal announced he would make seven projects over the next four years: 'Project SFW', 'The Power', 'Odd John', 'The Last Revolution', 'Odd John', 'R.U.R.' and a remake of 'Metropolis'.Gavin Signs Universal Pact

Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 3 June 1966: d12.
(Of these only 'The Power' would be made.) That month 'The Power' was cast.Pal: master of science fiction: Famed for special effects Science-fiction subject

By Kimmis Hendrick. The Christian Science Monitor 17 June 1966: 5.


Hamilton starred as Professor Jim Tanner, with Pleshette as his teammate and romantic interest Margery Lansing (Marge Hanson in the novel), and Michael Rennie (famous among science fiction film fans as Klaatu in 'The Day the Earth Stood Still') as new government liaison Mr. Nordlund. Otherwise, the story unfolds in a fashion similar to the novel, except for a somewhat different twist to the conclusion. In the film Tanner defeats Hart but retains his humanity; in the novel, Tanner sheds his humanity after killing Hart, and looks forward to "playing God" with normal humans, just as Hart did.

Pal said he was inspired by the art of Salvador Dal and Hieronymus Bosch.Pal Hits Pay Dirt With Sci-Fi Scott, John L. Los Angeles Times 12 June 1967: d24.

"I have my own frame of reference for power," said Hamilton. "This film has nothing to do with my religion but I hope I can make the part somehow significant."'Life is not just words': Likes challenges

By Kimmis Hendrick. The Christian Science Monitor 26 Apr 1967: 6.


Filming started April 1967.Second 'Navarone' Film Set

Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 13 Apr 1967: d19.
The film was shot at Culver City and Santa Monica.Cities Turn a Profit When Movie, TV Units Come to Town: MOVIE, TV UNITS Los Angeles Times 21 May 1967: ws1.

This film is memorable for a number of intriguing scenes, including murder by centrifuge, a seemingly possessed "Walk/Don't Walk" pedestrian sign, toy soldiers firing with real gunpowder, and "winking out" inanimate objects (the last two also in the novel). The soundtrack also memorably features a beating heart to signal the mind-control attempts and eerie music from a cymbalum (a hammered dulcimer-like instrument) accompanying the film's more suspenseful moments.

The music, written by Oscar-winning composer Mikls Rzsa, contributes an amusing fourth wall-breaking moment when Tanner, hearing the haunting tune, seems to expect a new disaster, only to be visibly relieved when he finds a cymbalum-violin duet being performed in the hotel lobby. This was Rzsa's final score for a film produced by MGM, for which he had scored numerous films throughout his career.

Legacy



There is a scene of what may be the first appearance and operation by telekinesis of a psi wheel in a film.

Also, the psi wheel scene can be seen in the film's trailer on YouTube.


See also



*List of American films of 1968

References




Buy The Power (1968 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1968



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106677130.