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IMDbPro

The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler

  • 1971
  • G
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
382
YOUR RATING
The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler (1971)
MysterySci-FiThriller

A U.S. senator is spirited away to a secret lab after a serious car crash, and his injuries are healed by advanced medical technology. A TV reporter who witnessed the accident investigates t... Read allA U.S. senator is spirited away to a secret lab after a serious car crash, and his injuries are healed by advanced medical technology. A TV reporter who witnessed the accident investigates the senator's disappearance and uncovers a plot.A U.S. senator is spirited away to a secret lab after a serious car crash, and his injuries are healed by advanced medical technology. A TV reporter who witnessed the accident investigates the senator's disappearance and uncovers a plot.

  • Director
    • Bob Wynn
  • Writers
    • Jay Simms
    • Tom Rolf
  • Stars
    • Leslie Nielsen
    • Bradford Dillman
    • James Daly
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    382
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bob Wynn
    • Writers
      • Jay Simms
      • Tom Rolf
    • Stars
      • Leslie Nielsen
      • Bradford Dillman
      • James Daly
    • 20User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos11

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    Top cast51

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    Leslie Nielsen
    Leslie Nielsen
    • Harry Walsh
    Bradford Dillman
    Bradford Dillman
    • Senator Zachary Wheeler
    James Daly
    James Daly
    • Dr. Redding
    Angie Dickinson
    Angie Dickinson
    • Dr. Layle Johnson
    Robert J. Wilke
    Robert J. Wilke
    • Fielding
    Jack Carter
    Jack Carter
    • Dwight Chiles
    Don Haggerty
    Don Haggerty
    • Jake
    Lew Brown
    Lew Brown
    • Collins
    Richard Schuyler
    • Bates
    Dick Simmons
    Dick Simmons
    • Adams
    • (as Richard Simmons)
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Craig Harmon
    Tristram Coffin
    Tristram Coffin
    • Dr. Keating
    • (as Tris Coffin)
    Peter Mamakos
    Peter Mamakos
    • Premier Mabulla
    Ruben Moreno
    • Gen. Munoz
    Steve Cory
    • Carson
    Jim Healy
    • TV Commentator #1
    Lee Giroux
    • TV Commentator #2
    Jill Jaress
    Jill Jaress
    • Ensign Lee
    • Director
      • Bob Wynn
    • Writers
      • Jay Simms
      • Tom Rolf
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    5.4382
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Sturgeon54

    Would Make Michael Crichton Proud

    This film did remind me of the kinds of ideas in Crichton's novels - especially his early medical fiction. Who would have guessed that a now-forgotten low-budget B-movie would actually end up more timely almost 40 years after its original release? I don't know of any earlier film treatments of the subject of cloning than this film - I really wonder what audiences thought when this first came out, as the plot line of the film must have seemed really wild back then. I don't particularly care for remakes - especially of good movies like this - but now would be a terrific time for a remake of this story, possibly with a better budget. As it is, the film stretches its budget pretty well, but I would have appreciated greater attention to the scientific aspects of the cloning (possibly with some special effects). Additionally, because all of the real-life politicians seem to be weighing in on the stem cell and medical ethics issues, the political aspects of the story would fit perfectly into a remake, where they could be fleshed out in greater detail. I guess this movie just has me thinking more of what it could have been than what it is. On its own level, it is a surprisingly thoughtful low-budget film that concentrates on ideas, rather than action. For that, it is well worth searching out.

    On a final note, it has a ridiculous non-sequitur ending that had me giggling, but the ending seems to fit a cheap movie like this, whose filmmakers certainly couldn't afford a lot of explosions and gunfights .
    7richardchatten

    "Living is an addictive thing"

    Another politically loaded sci-fi fable from the pen of the writer of 'The Creation of the Humanoids', much of it shot in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

    Fairly typical of the sort of thing Leslie Nielsen was making in his days as a straight actor, this has a very similar plot 'Seconds' and 'Never Let Me Go', but with more emphasis on action (and a generally rather whimsical score by Marlin Skiles). As it unfolds it splits into two separate narratives involving Nielsen on one hand and Dillman on the other.

    But the mood darkens considerably (and the plot turns far more ghoulish) as the political implications of creating longevity for a select and amoral few (here decided by a cabal called the Committee of Nine) are explored. And when the two strands finally come together there's a zinger of a punchline.

    Angie Dickinson (now ninety) also has a raunchy scene shaving Dillman.
    5Leofwine_draca

    Long forgotten cloning thriller

    THE RESURRECTION OF ZACHARY WHEELER is a weird little sci fi movie most probably forgotten by today's audiences. Certainly the low budget of the thing is off-putting, but if you can overcome the film's deficiencies then you might just enjoy it nonetheless. This is a fun little cloning thriller that plays out with the same kind of verve as a Michael Crichton film or the likes of THE CHINA SYNDROME.

    Leslie Nielsen stars in the straight role of a reporter who witnesses a politician being mortally injured in a car accident. Before long the whole thing is hushed up, so he takes it upon himself to investigate and uncover the truth, which is that the government have begun a cloning scheme in order to harvest spare parts. There are a few chase scenes here, alongside some moments involving people in dodgy blue make up, and it's all very limited. But the film covers the same paranoid government conspiracy ground as many a '70s thriller, and Nielsen gives a solid performance as the lead. Bradford Dillman and Angie Dickinson play in support.
    7Chase_Witherspoon

    Conehead Clones

    A senator (Dillman) is near-fatally injured in a car wreck witnessed only by intrepid reporter (Nielsen) whose eyewitness account is gagged for national security purposes. Discontent with the ruse, Nielsen investigates and ends up discovering an elaborate human organ harvesting clinic that potentially holds the key to mankind's survival - but only a select few. Science Fiction/pseudo political thriller chooses to focus on the moral dilemmas of its cause, resorting to limp-wristed protection of its diabolical secrets, when opposition threaten to reveal the project's secrets.

    Small in scale, and more akin to the production values of a telemovie than a fully fledged feature film, there are however some assets in the cast and one or two plot twists to which you can look forward. Dillman as the title character spends most of his time comatose and then in a wheelchair debating scientific heresy, while Dickinson looks more like a space cadet than the dedicated doctor, who believes her work is of national significance. Nielsen is essentially the central character, a tenacious reporter not content to digest the force-fed facts without due interrogation. He spends most of the film, piecing together evidence that eventually leads him to the mysterious clinic in New Mexico. Noted stage actor Daly is also quite effective as the clinic's principal surgeon; his attempt to rationalise the existence of the coneheaded clones (called Somas) lies more in the field of fantasy than it does in any serious debate on human cloning.

    Well scripted, with okay special effects, concerned mostly of pale-faced make-up on stupefied faces - the Dillman zoo experiment is unintentionally funny, his 'full retard' no doubt perfected by hours of rehearsals and takes. Dressed in monk-like garb with coneheaded frontal lobe projection, the Somas are also quite inspired imagery; more emphasis on their existence might have balanced the argument better, but their brief inclusion is still an alarming visual demonstration of the human harvesting process depicted in the film. Despite its 100 minutes, there's ample action, characterisation and plot development; had the climax resolved more satisfactorily, the film might have become a minor cult favourite, ahead of its time in terms of content. As it is, a worthy sci-fi companion, and perhaps no longer such a distant prospect.
    8Hey_Sweden

    An obscurity worth seeking out.

    Zachary Wheeler (Bradford Dillman), a state senator with great potential, gets into a horrific traffic accident in the opening minutes of this film. It doesn't seem that he will make it, and Harry Walsh (Leslie Nielsen), a reporter who arrives on the scene, accompanies him to Bethesda, where Harry witnesses the senator being whisked away to parts unknown. A cover-up is engineered regarding the senators' whereabouts, and Harry is right to smell a rat. He doggedly pursues his story, despite some risk to life and limb, while a revived Senator Wheeler discovers the incredible medical breakthrough that prolonged his life.

    "The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler" is telling a tried-and-true Dr. Frankenstein-type story (scripted by Jay Simms and Tom Rolf), complete with the expected indignant reaction as the senator can't believe the gall of these doctors. The plot is rather reminiscent of the more well-known "Parts: The Clonus Horror", except that RoZW predates "Parts" by several years. It leads to some effectively creepy moments, and the yarn concocted by Simms & Rolf is utterly absorbing and interesting. The eventual resolution is not very satisfying, but up until then the film is quite fun, with plenty of location shooting in New Mexico, and a quick-thinking, likeable protagonist in the form of Walsh. You have to respect this guy for being so tenacious.

    The whole cast is great. Dillman and Angie Dickinson, as one of the clinic doctors, strike up a warm relationship, James Daly is authoritative as the not-that-good doctor who's pioneered this revolutionary surgery, and Robert J. Wilke is an appropriately cold-blooded antagonist determined to keep the operations a secret. Other familiar faces like Jack Carter, Don Haggerty, William Bryant, Tristram Coffin, Byron Morrow, Harry Holcombe, and Tyler McVey also turn up.

    Mildly flashy opening credits do give this the feeling of a classic B picture from decades past, which is fitting, since this was clearly done on a somewhat limited budget. But the moral / ethical questions posed here are still extremely relevant 47 years later.

    The sole theatrical directing effort for Bob Wynn, who mostly worked in TV.

    Eight out of 10.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Cited as the first U.S. made example of the videotape-to-film process.
    • Quotes

      Cab Driver: Where to, Mister?

      Harry Walsh: How far to the library?

      Cab Driver: About six miles.

      Harry Walsh: I'll give you ten bucks if you get me there in five minutes.

      Cab Driver: That's what I call a real thirst for knowledge!

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 1971 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Resurrection of Clayton Zachary Wheeler
    • Filming locations
      • Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
    • Production company
      • Madison Productions (I)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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