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IMDbPro

Future Shock

  • 1972
  • 43m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
162
YOUR RATING
Future Shock (1972)
DocumentaryShort

Describes the constant, bewildering barrage of new technologies and all the resulting societal changes those technologies bring about.Describes the constant, bewildering barrage of new technologies and all the resulting societal changes those technologies bring about.Describes the constant, bewildering barrage of new technologies and all the resulting societal changes those technologies bring about.

  • Director
    • Alexander Grasshoff
  • Writers
    • Ken Rosen
    • Alvin Toffler
  • Stars
    • Orson Welles
    • John Bray
    • Verlin Cobb
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    162
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Grasshoff
    • Writers
      • Ken Rosen
      • Alvin Toffler
    • Stars
      • Orson Welles
      • John Bray
      • Verlin Cobb
    • 7User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast13

    Edit
    Orson Welles
    Orson Welles
    • Narrator
    John Bray
    • Self - Prostheticist
    Verlin Cobb
    • Self - Surgery Patient
    Charles Epstein
    • Self - Cloning Researcher
    William Epstein
    • Self - Dermatologist
    • (as Dr. William Epstein)
    Samuel Kountz
    • Self - Transplant Surgeon
    James McGaugh
    • Self - Psychobiologist
    Erma Rimmer
    • Self
    Robert H. Rimmer
    • Self
    Carl Sheaffer
    • Self - Heart Transplant Recipient
    Alvin Toffler
    Alvin Toffler
    • Self
    Kurt Wagner
    • Self - Plastic Surgeon
    Grey Walter
    • Self
    • Director
      • Alexander Grasshoff
    • Writers
      • Ken Rosen
      • Alvin Toffler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.0162
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    Featured reviews

    RodrigAndrisan

    Nothing about vaccines, viruses or Bill Gates!

    Don't watch this movie! It's not a documentary, it's a terrible horror movie. You will see an obese Orson Welles being cloned while smoking cigar after cigar. And you will burst into tears seeing a little girl who changes her old doll, paying a difference in money, with a new doll that says mother.
    7preppy-3

    Very dated but interesting

    This was shown to me multiple times when I was in high school back in 1979. At first I paid no attention (I had no interest in this at all) but it slowly pulled me in. It's a documentary narrated in a ponderous fashion by Orson Welles. It talks about how technology is moving too fast and too quick for humans to keep up with it. This leads to "future shock". Also it talks about how pollution will destroy the planet. Surprisingly it also shows a gay marriage between two men! That was considered shocking and beyond belief in 1972. Look at it now. Aside from that one thing nothing in the movie has come to pass. If the events mentioned here HAD happened we'd all be dead by now. Still it is interesting as a period piece. Back in the early 1970s activism was in--people were all positive the world wouldn't make it into 2000--and this picture (based on a best-selling book) shows a very dire future. So it is interesting now in a historical context but it's more amusing than anything else. I give it a 7. If you want to see it someone downloaded it onto YouTube
    7vdoman

    I was the A/V geek in High School

    I lived in Mich and went to HS between '75 to '79. I was the kid in the library who was one of the very few who could thread the Singer 16mm projector (it had numbers where you put the film in, it couldn't be any easier). Anyway, I like to taken out of class and take a film projector on a roll-cart into other classes and show films. I was such a bad student, that the teachers actually begin to like me for helping them out. I must have seen this movie several dozen times. This film, "Paddle to the Sea ", and "The lady or the tiger", are burned into my memory. Such a delight to find them on YouTube.
    7slhjunk-385-588774

    Future Shock shocked me a little in 1979...

    I hit 7 in rating this 43 min. documentary for its entertainment & thought-provoking value. As I read the 1st review on this site, I wondered if that writer & I were classmates. I too was first shown this video in Bible class in a MI SDA boarding academy & again in '83 by the same teacher just before we graduated. I found most of the movie interesting & somewhat amusing/entertaining. Other scenes were seared into my brain, such as the marriage between two men, which under my fundamentalist indoctrination at that time, seemed impossible to ever happen. ;)

    Well, I'm writing this on Monday, June 29, 2015... three days after the US Supreme Court upheld gay marriage for ALL of the US; ~35 yrs after I first viewed the documentary. And I am smiling. Sure, Future Shock was a sensationalistic view of what could become of the human race - what documentary doesn't appeal to emotion in order to sell itself? And yes, it's nice to look back in amusement at the authors who perversely feared change in general & felt threatened by rapid advancements in technology. As another reviewer mentioned, if this video had foreseen viewers watching the flick on a hand-held device, we'd be impressed. Otherwise we're amused/tickled & thankful that the authors were wrong in most of their 'predictions.' =)

    I just found the link to re-watch the documentary on Youtube, so I think I will, in celebration of gay marriage being made legal in the US. Air-popped popcorn & dark chocolate bar in hand; check! =D
    6larks-836-151630

    old anxieties still relevant for our times

    The Future Shock documentary was based on the best selling book by Alvin Toffler, and reflects the global ecological and technological concerns of society at the time.

    THE GOOD: Awesome moody Moog-synth keyboard sounds, suggesting Future Shock was a stylistic forerunner of 'Blade Runner's' futuristic aesthetic. The doco also highlights many changing technologies that have indeed impacted on our civilisation. For example cloning, which was a completely implausible technology at the time, was discussed as a realistic possibility.

    THE BAD: The style is at times stodgy and Wells puts on his very best harbinger-of-doom narration voice, whilst constantly bemoaning that 'Nothing is permanent any more' as though before that nothing had ever died or disintegrated in the whole history of the universe. Even heart transplants and artificial limbs are portrayed as examples of 'constant change, leading to Futureshock'. The double-sided nature of technology is not often discussed - most technology is seen as unequivocally bad.

    Overall this program raises some good points that are still relevant today. It would have benefited from a deeper analysis of the ways technology would shape and even enhance our lives, rather than the overly-simplistic 'technology is change, and change is bad'. Clearly, not all change is bad, as in the case of desegregation and equal rights for women. But then, as a child of Future Shock, I don't know any different anyway!

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    Storyline

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    • Connections
      Referenced in À cause d'un assassinat (1974)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 22, 1972 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Production company
      • Metromedia Producers Corporation (MPC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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