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Projekt Brainstorm

Originaltitel: Brainstorm
  • 1983
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 46 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,4/10
13.920
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Projekt Brainstorm (1983)
Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben3:21
1 Video
61 Fotos
Conspiracy ThrillerCyberpunkSci-FiThriller

Forscher entwickeln ein System, mit dem sie in die Köpfe der Menschen springen können.Forscher entwickeln ein System, mit dem sie in die Köpfe der Menschen springen können.Forscher entwickeln ein System, mit dem sie in die Köpfe der Menschen springen können.

  • Regie
    • Douglas Trumbull
  • Drehbuch
    • Bruce Joel Rubin
    • Robert Stitzel
    • Philip Frank Messina
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Christopher Walken
    • Natalie Wood
    • Louise Fletcher
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,4/10
    13.920
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Douglas Trumbull
    • Drehbuch
      • Bruce Joel Rubin
      • Robert Stitzel
      • Philip Frank Messina
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Christopher Walken
      • Natalie Wood
      • Louise Fletcher
    • 113Benutzerrezensionen
    • 55Kritische Rezensionen
    • 57Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Gewinne & 6 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:21
    Trailer

    Fotos61

    Poster ansehen
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    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 53
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    Topbesetzung54

    Ändern
    Christopher Walken
    Christopher Walken
    • Michael Brace
    Natalie Wood
    Natalie Wood
    • Karen Brace
    Louise Fletcher
    Louise Fletcher
    • Lillian Reynolds
    Cliff Robertson
    Cliff Robertson
    • Alex Terson
    Jordan Christopher
    Jordan Christopher
    • Gordy Forbes
    Donald Hotton
    Donald Hotton
    • Landan Marks
    Alan Fudge
    Alan Fudge
    • Robert Jenkins
    Joe Dorsey
    Joe Dorsey
    • Hal Abramson
    Bill Morey
    Bill Morey
    • James Zimbach
    Jason Lively
    Jason Lively
    • Chris Brace
    Darrell Larson
    Darrell Larson
    • Security Technician
    Lou Walker
    Lou Walker
    • Chef
    Stacey Kuhne-Adams
    • Andrea
    John Hugh
    • Animal Lab Technician
    Ira David Wood III
    Ira David Wood III
    • Barry
    • (as David Wood)
    Keith Colbert
    • Dr. Ted Harris
    Jerry Bennett
    • Dr. Janet Bock
    Mary Fran Lyman
    • Realtor
    • (as Mary-Fran Lyman)
    • Regie
      • Douglas Trumbull
    • Drehbuch
      • Bruce Joel Rubin
      • Robert Stitzel
      • Philip Frank Messina
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen113

    6,413.9K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10budmassey

    About exploring experience, life, love, even death, from the point of view of others.

    Everyone knows this was Natalie Wood's last film, and that some of her scenes were filmed after her death with a stand-in you only see from behind. Director Donald Trumball, best known for his special effects work in Blade Runner, Close Enounters, and Star Trek, chose this time to build his story on plot and character development, a good choice given the enormous talent he had to work with. Trumball's battle with studio execs to finish the film after Wood's death, rather than claim the insurance proceeds and call the film off, ended his career in Hollywood, but assured that this gem would not be lost. It is somewhat ironic that Natalie's swan song should be a sci-fi movie, since she was hardly known for work in the genre, but she brings a grace and charm, as well as depth and beauty, to the genre that is usually lacking.

    Most sci-fi films based on technology don't age well, and there are times where this is no exception. The idea of recording on tape, let alone making tape loops, must seem like wax cylinder recordings to today's MP3 generation. The tapes themselves were props borrowed from a film being shot nearby, and that film was itself a dismal failure. But the concept is timeless, and so well done that, all in all, the film still works as well as it did in 1983.

    Lesser screenplays would have been content with the main story line; scientists invent a way to record brainwaves and play them back for a real life out of body experience, and for just such a stinker, check out Strange Days. But then along comes the incomparable, utterly fabulous Louise Fletcher, who, as one of the co-inventors of the aforementioned device, records her death when she suffers a heart attack while working late one night. For the rest of the film, people are either trying to play the tape or prevent others from playing it. Meanwhile, the technology gets hijacked by two-dimensional government lackeys trying to exploit the weapons potential of the invention.

    One can easily pick out scenes of this movie to vilify or exalt, all these years later, and any object viewed over time eventually has a vanishing point. The almost slapstick scene where the assembly robots go berserk is one example of a scene that, while consistent with its contemporaries, is silly today. The death scene, though much maligned, is equally misunderstood, and provides the metaphysical underpinnings that elevate Brainstorm above mere gadget flicks. Brainstorm is about exploring experience, life, love, even death, from the point of view of others, and Academy Award winner Louise Fletcher allows us to do so through her consummate skill in presenting a death scene of sufficient awe and wonder to warrant exploration.

    If you want to find out what else happens, watch the film, but when you do, don't ignore the beautiful, delicate interplay between Christopher Walken and Natalie Wood. Their careening relationship seems somehow tied to the invention they helped make, and there are sequences so beautiful that I sometimes take out the DVD just to marvel at them.

    Despite changing styles in special effects, this is a timeless and beautiful story that transcends the genre and, with Walken, Wood and Fletcher, becomes more than just a story about shiny gold tapes that record brain waves. It's more about immovable objects and irresistible forces and what happens when they collide. Intrigued? Good. Go watch it.
    Mr Pants

    So that's where Strange Days got the idea

    Anybody notice certain similarities 'twixt this film and the movie "Strange Days"? In that movie they have perfected a memory-recording device that can be played back on small tapes. Is "Brainstorm" so forgotten that nobody else has made the connection?

    "Strange Days" was heralded for its originality, but some of us know better. People who are addicted to the tapes in "Strange Days" are called "tapeheads". I'd like to ask John Cusack and Tim Robbins if they think *that's* original.
    7Boba_Fett1138

    '80's sci-fi done '70's style

    I really love these old fashioned, deliberately slower, type of sci-fi movies, that puts its emphasis on the science and takes a realistic approach with its story, no matter how ridicules it all often can get. These type of movies mostly got done successfully in the '70's and this movie actually also has '70's style written all over it. Yet it is as if this movie is holding back, which really prevents this movie from being a classic within its genre, even though all of the right ingredients and potential seemed to be there.

    So you could call "Brainstorm" a bit of a disappointment but by doing so you are not doing the movie enough justice and you are not giving it the credit it still deserves. I really still liked it, despite all of its flaws, though some of those flaws can also be brought back to the difficulties of production at the time.

    Biggest 'inconvinience' for this movie of course was the sudden and tragic death of key actress Natalie Wood. It almost caused this movie to be stopped down completely but with some changes and rewrites the movie still got finished and released, just not in the way it originally got intended. It must be the reason why the movie ends so abruptly and the story leaves far more questions than answers.

    The movie does really have a great concept of the invention of a device that can recored people's experiences and feelings and that can be played back by a different person that will feel the exact same feelings, smells and tastes. A sort of virtual reality, with the exception of that there is actually nothing virtual about the reality. The possibilities with this device are endless and sort of a shame that now almost 30 years later we don't have anything remotely close yet. I said that the possibilities are endless, yet the movie is doing far too little with it. It deliberately restrains itself it seems.

    The movie just never reaches full potential, though it is obvious that somewhere deep down everything there is still a great movie to be found. But it remains a fact that the movie never reaches its full potential with its story. The story fails to intrigue and also fails with other things, such as its tension. Quite frankly I had no idea what was all happening toward the end and what the big 'conflict' that needed to be resolved was and how it got done exactly. There is a 'villainoush' plot in the movie that just never seemed that evil- or got explained good enough.

    The movie got directed by special effect expert Douglas Trumbull. So visually this movie really doesn't disappoint and to be frank I think that it are still mostly the visuals and its effects that safe this movie and still make it a more than good watch.

    But you also have to give credit to Christopher Walken of course, who basically never fails to put down a great performance and character. I really liked most of the acting in this movie and it seemed to be a very well cast one, with some truly great characters in it, that all interact really great and convincingly together.

    The movie also features an early James Horner musical score. Funny thing about Horner musical scores is that basically it doesn't matter if it's anything from the '80's, 90's, 2000's or this decade, the all have the same sound and feature the same motifs. It's not big secret Horner often recycles his most early scores and the score of this movie also got heavily recycled by himself in many later movies. Still I'm sure his fans can appreciate his score for this movie and I'm also really not hateful toward it.

    Really not as great as this movie potentially could and perhaps also should had been but nevertheless it remains still a good 'realistic' science-fiction movie to watch.

    7/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    hodapp

    Knock my socks off

    Brainstorm had a rocky road to completion. After Natalie Wood died before completion of shooting, the studio wanted to shut it down and cash in the completion bond. Trumbull had fought tooth and nail to get the film made to begin with, and when it looked like it would be snatched from the jaws of victory, he hunkered down and dramatically altered sequences to prove it could indeed be finished without Wood's unshot scenes.

    The "recorded memory" sequences were even more vivid for us in Indianapolis who saw it at the Eastwood theatre. The Eastwood had one of the few curved Cinerama roadshow screens outside of New York and Hollywood's Cinerama Dome. Think of it as a smaller version of an Omnimax screen. Sitting in the front row, you were completely enveloped by the film, and the visual and audio effect when the "memory" sequences lit up were quite attention grabbing. Trumbull was at this time working on his ill-fated Showscan process for amusement park rides, and was very interested in audience perceptions of diffrent lenses and frame rates. Some of this is used in Brainstorm. It's just not the same on a TV set of any size.

    The central core of the story - the recording of the death of Lillian and Michael's obsession to experience it - is a disturbing one, because it explores the very nature of life and death. It can satisfy or dissappoint, because Trumbull has put his vision of memory, experience, death and afterlife on film for everyone to take pot shots at. And they did. It's a shame, because the film is beautiful, thought provoking, and ingenious. Yeah, I know, it has all of that evil government plot boilerplate. Look past it.

    (It even revels in the quirks of the researchers, showing the second thing everybody does with new technology is use it for porn.)
    6Mr-Fusion

    Ambitious in concept

    One of the things I really liked about "Brainstorm" is that it feels related to "TRON". This is in more than just the technological/corporate themes, but also in the lab scenes and some of the (excellent) locations. Evidently, this is Natalie Wood's final performance (and it's a good one) but the characters are the least engaging aspect of the movie. It has its virtues, but there isn't really anyone here to latch onto; except for one, whose death really gives the movie some emotional weight (thanks to his/her performance).

    It's the science fiction that takes center stage with this movie. What if two people can share sensory experience through telepathy? What happens when the money men take over the equipment to turn a profit? Even creating a mixtape out of sense data is intriguing. The ideas are the fun part. What's weird is seeing a bored Christopher Walken.

    6/10

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Because of the immensely troubled production and disagreements with MGM, Douglas Trumbull opted never to direct a Hollywood film again. In 1983 he stated, "I have no interest . . . in doing another Hollywood feature film . . . Absolutely none. The movie business is so totally screwed-up that I just don't have the energy to invest three or four years in a feature film. Moviemaking is like waging war. It destroys your personal life, too. The people who can survive the process of making films have largely given up their personal lives in order to do that, just because it's such a battle to make a movie. And in doing that, they've isolated themselves from the very audience that they're trying to reach."
    • Patzer
      Several of the tapes play back from a third-person perspective, which would be impossible if the tapes were actually a person's recorded memory.
    • Zitate

      Dr. Michael Anthony Brace: I made that for you. It's a gift.

      [hands her the tape and sets the large silver metal case on the bed]

      Karen Brace: What is it?

      Dr. Michael Anthony Brace: It's me.

    • Crazy Credits
      After the final credit has rolled, 'TO NATALIE' appears for a couple seconds
    • Alternative Versionen
      In the psychotic episode sequence when Michael's (Christopher Walken) son Chris (Jason Lively) wears the headset, there's a slight difference between the 70mm version and 35mm version. In the 70mm version of Chris's hallucination when Michael flips a lever presumably sending an electrical current to Chris's head, the camera cuts to and remains on a shot of a circular device with electricity running through it, as Michael is heard to say, 'Now you're gonna find out it's mine!' In the 35mm version, the shot arrangement is the same except that it cuts back to a closeup of Michael saying the line 'Now you're gonna find out it's mine!'
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Trumbull Land (2018)

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    FAQ21

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 10. Februar 1984 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Proyecto Brainstorm
    • Drehorte
      • Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA(Burroughs Wellcome Pharmaceutical Corporation HQ)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • JF Productions
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • SLM Entertainment
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 15.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 10.219.460 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 1.196.965 $
      • 2. Okt. 1983
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 10.219.460 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 46 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color

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