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IMDbPro

Genesis II

  • Téléfilm
  • 1973
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 14min
NOTE IMDb
5,8/10
1,2 k
MA NOTE
Alex Cord and Mariette Hartley in Genesis II (1973)
DramaSci-FiThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA scientist who has been preserved in suspended animation wakes up to find himself in a primitive society in the future.A scientist who has been preserved in suspended animation wakes up to find himself in a primitive society in the future.A scientist who has been preserved in suspended animation wakes up to find himself in a primitive society in the future.

  • Réalisation
    • John Llewellyn Moxey
  • Scénario
    • Gene Roddenberry
  • Casting principal
    • Alex Cord
    • Mariette Hartley
    • Ted Cassidy
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,8/10
    1,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Llewellyn Moxey
    • Scénario
      • Gene Roddenberry
    • Casting principal
      • Alex Cord
      • Mariette Hartley
      • Ted Cassidy
    • 41avis d'utilisateurs
    • 30avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Photos37

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    + 31
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    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Alex Cord
    Alex Cord
    • Dylan Hunt
    Mariette Hartley
    Mariette Hartley
    • Lyra-a
    Ted Cassidy
    Ted Cassidy
    • Isiah
    Percy Rodrigues
    Percy Rodrigues
    • Primus Kimbridge
    Harvey Jason
    Harvey Jason
    • Singh
    Titos Vandis
    Titos Vandis
    • Yuloff
    Bill Striglos
    • Dr. Kellum
    Lynne Marta
    Lynne Marta
    • Harper-Smythe
    Harry Raybould
    • Slan-n
    Majel Barrett
    Majel Barrett
    • Primus Dominic
    Leon Askin
    Leon Askin
    • Overseer
    Liam Dunn
    Liam Dunn
    • Janos
    Scott Graham
    Scott Graham
    • Tyranian Teacher
    Ed Ashley
    • Wehr-r
    Linda Grant
    • Astrid
    Robert Swan
    Robert Swan
    • Lahyn-n
    Beulah Quo
    • Primus Lu Chan
    Dennis Robertson
    Dennis Robertson
    • General
    • Réalisation
      • John Llewellyn Moxey
    • Scénario
      • Gene Roddenberry
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs41

    5,81.2K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    sanford468

    Filmed at my college alma mater

    The architecture referred to by another reviewer is actually the campus of the University of California at Riverside. It was filmed while I was a student there, during spring break so no students were around. While I loved the film, it was hard to suspend my disbelief looking at buildings I saw every day. We hoped it would take off as a series, since the campus got a paint job, some landscaping, and a few thousand dollars for our scholarship funds in exchange for letting them film. That "futuristic" architecture was mostly built in the early to mid 1960's. But it still has that "future" look. One of my fond memories of my undergraduate alma mater.
    8stephe1605

    Clearing up some misconceptions.

    Genesis II was made for CBS, who turned it down in favor of the Planet of the Apes series, with the thinking that a network could have only one science fiction show on its schedule at a time.

    Planet Earth was made for ABC, and it wasn't a sequel, rather, the next episode of the same premise, with a new male lead and a lighter tone.

    Star Trek: The Motion Picture's script was written to be an episode of Genesis II. (and was in turn, stolen from an older episode of Star Trek! (Earth satellite comes back looking for its maker))

    Andromeda uses two of the characters' names (Dylan Hunt and Harper Smythe)though it has little to do with the original concept. By using the names I suppose the producers could call it "Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda") I really wish they would have made a Genesis II series instead,

    IMHO: I liked that Mariette Hartley was set up to be a recurring, love-interest/villain for Dylan. It could have been a good show, though I have to agree with the poster who said it probably would have only lasted one season. Still, 26 episodes would have been great to have.
    lor_

    A dud

    One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by John Llewellyn Moxey; Produced by Gene Roddenberry, for Warner Brothers TV, broadcast by CBS-TV. Screenplay by Gene Roddenberry; Photography by Gerald Perry Finnerman; Edited by George Watters; Music by Harry Sukman; Makeup by Tom Burman. Starring: Alex Cord, Mariette Hartley, Ted Cassidy, Percy Rodrigues, Harvey Jason, Titos Vandis, Lynn Marta, Majel Barrett and Leon Askin.

    Boring, stupid telefilm pilot in which Gene rips off the sillier and more irritating elements which did in his "Star Trek". Listless crud "actor" Cord is transported to a future existence via suspended animation, and the tired premise pits him with superior technological knowledge against fetishistic communities lapsed into primitive cultural patterns and barbarism.
    8silverscreen888

    Very Underrated Concept; Thoughtful and Lyrical; Fine Series Concept

    This film was made for television by Gene Roddenberry, under his NBC contract to develop new properties. Its provocative title referred to a new ecological beginning for Earth, after WWIII had been fought, 150-plus years had gone by, and the ravages of nuclear bombs had been all-but-obliterated. The series was turned down by network 'tsars', although scripts for it were authorized. Two more versions of the concept, including "Planet Earth" were produced as 'pilot' films for a series also. The storyline opens in the near future with Dylan Hunt working at a huge underground facility in Carlsbad Caverns. His project is served by magnetic-slide underground tunnels through which run high-speed trains. His subject is cryogenics, which is a technology with many potential uses from freezing men against the time their diseases will be cured to space-travel applications. Once he arrives on a sub-shuttle train back at the Project, he tries to help as something tectonic goes wrong; he is trapped in a life-sustaining cryogenic environment and sleeps for a century and a half. Those who eventually awaken him are people from the city of Pax, whose teams are combing the Earth contacting and influencing civilizations everywhere. She who finds him first is Lyra-A, a gorgeous mutant from the totalitarian city of Tyrania, set in the mountains near Phoenix; we learn later she is only pretending to be an escapee but really spying, learning what Pax's leaders are planning. Once fully restored, after her nursing and indoctrination of him(quite against Pax's leaders' policies), he sees classrooms and other rebuilding activities, and he meets the city's leaders, the Primuses; and of course they want him to join their effort. They are against the use of nuclear power, against killing for that matter; as a scientist, their attitude does not persuade him to adopt their radical solution to Earth's problems. Feeling he is only hearing one side of the story, he runs off with Lyra-A to see Tyrania. The problem with the mutant city, the abject fear and worship shown to her from the beginning by folk near a train departure station and once within the City, is disturbing to his assumptions. He finds out why the folk were afraid very soon. The city's leaders want him also, to help them repair the defective nuclear power station supplying their city. And they are willing to use the "stim"--an electronic pleasure-pain rod--a Roddenberry hangup-type device--that is the lineal descendant of the agonizer pain device used in the "Star Trek" episodes "Mirror, Mirror" and "Spocks' Brain" plus certain alien race Klingons' devices from the same TV series. Lyra-A begs him to join them; she loves him. But he must refuse and is sentenced to slavery, in the hopes he can be broken. The Pax Team he met earlier, three operatives, rescue him, and get him out of the infernal mutants' city. He goes off alone and, for his own reasons, blows up the nuclear plant. Then he returns to Pax, being willing to help them rebuild the world--to give it "Genesis II". The script for the project was written by Gene Roddenberry; the direction was well-done by John Llewellyn Moxey. Robert M. Anderson did the art direction, William Ware Theiss the costumes. "Star trek" veteran Gerald Perry Finnerman was its cinematographer. This is a beautiful production, using UC Riverside settings to augment its low budget; and its sub-shuttle trains are an excellent device by my standards--the magnetic equivalent of the "Star Trek" starship's less- believable transporter molecular disassembly machines. The mutants with their two navels are well done; the costumes, sets and exterior landscape shots are far-above-average for any film. Alex Cord lacks the classical speech to play the scientist Dylan Hunt, but he is attractive and manages to put the part across. Mariette Hartley is beautiful and effective as Lyra-A; in this period, she was US TV's busiest guest star and this part demonstrates why. The Primuses include Percy Rodrigues as Isaac Kimbridge, the leader, Titos Vandis as Yuloff, the Russian-born Security Chief, Roddenberry's wife Majel Barrett and Beulah Quo, plus Ted Cassidy as the white Indian Isaiah, Lynne Marta as a unisex follower of St. Sigmund Freud's Way, and Bill Strigloss as his Team partners, Harry Raybould as a villainous Tyranian, Robert Swan and Liam Dunn, among others. This is not a preachy film; it is a 1960s film within which the writer expected people to be able to understand the difference between ethical individuals conjoining their efforts in a society and those who prey on victims, the collectivists of any era, including the present. Without this categorical conceptual basis, of distinction, the film cannot be comprehended. So it is both a very-good low-budget entertainment and series concept, and also a litmus-paper test for objective thinking. Because, note--the scientist here rejected both total peace and total war--and he expected to persuade his new fellow citizens in Pax toward something between the democratic and republican extremes. In the meanwhile, there was world to be reclaimed. By the way, the series was probably rejected because it lacked a logical leading man as strong star and because in a long sequence in the original script, which I have read, Roddenberry described World War II (it was not allowed into the production; and Israel among others was on the wrong side of it; all TV network tsars could see was letters of protest; they seem to have missed the excellence of the conception entirely. This was to me as a writer and one who adapted elements of the story into a dramatic sci-fi novel the best of Gene Roddenberry's ideas for a series project.
    8EmprKarr

    Interesting, strong premise

    Originally filmed as the pilot for an aborted television series, this television movie from the creator of Star Trek stands as a strong piece of entertainment on its own. It's rarely seen today; there has never been official VHS or DVD release in America, in fact.

    The movie demonstrates a lot of ingenuity (the sub-shuttle and the idea of Freud as a saint come to mind). It also captures some of the magic of the original series in its themes, but presents them with a 1970s mentality. It also has some of the camp charm of the original Trek (especially in regards to the underground cave set); the futuristic city's architectural style reminds me of a better realization of the planet Deneva from the original series episode "Operation--Annihilate!" The parade of former Trek actors -- Majel Barrett (Christine Chapel), Percy Rodgriguez (Commodore Stone), Ted Cassidy (Ruk), and of course, Mariette Hartley (whose two belly buttons here is a "gotcha" to the censors, who wouldn't permit her belly button to be shown on the original Trek) is also sure to please any original series fan.

    While the film occasionally lapses into weak moments (the reactions to the nuclear shockwave at the end are among the laughable moments), it is nonetheless indicative of a series with great potential. A rare find, and well worth the watch to catch a glimpse of one of a Roddenberry series that never was. (This film was remade as Planet Earth, another failed pilot, a year later.)

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The science fiction justification for Lyra-a (Mariette Hartley) and other Tyranians having two navels is that they have redundant circulatory systems. However, Gene Roddenberry joked that the behind-the-scenes reason was to make up for the covered navels mandated by network and studio censors during the production of Star Trek (1966).
    • Gaffes
      When Dylan Hunt is first shown being discovered after the earthquake, his right leg is hanging off of the table he is strapped to. When the camera angle switches to the inside the chamber, both legs are now on the table.
    • Connexions
      Followed by Planète terre (1974)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 mars 1973 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Génesis II
    • Lieux de tournage
      • University of California, Riverside - 900 University Ave, Riverside, Californie, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Norway Productions
      • Warner Bros. Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 14 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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