The Andromeda Strain (1971) First Time Watching! Movie Reaction!

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The Andromeda Strain (1971)
There's a fire, sir.
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00:00 Intro
02:34 Reaction
37:19 Outro & Discussion
48:19 THANK YOU!
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This video is for commentary and criticism only and is not a replacement for watching The Andromeda Strain
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Пікірлер: 851

  • @kyoshiro13
    @kyoshiro139 күн бұрын

    Michael Crichton wrote this story while in Medical School ( graduated summa cum laude from Harvard College in 1964 and received his MD from Harvard Medical School in 1969). Then went on to write (or screenwrite) Jurassic Park, Westworld, 13th Warrior , Twister, Congo and created the TV show ER.

  • @Madbandit77

    @Madbandit77

    9 күн бұрын

    He was also a journeyman film director. His work includes Westworld, The Great Train Robbery (fun) Coma, Looker (very relevant today), Runaway (also fun) and Physical Evidence.

  • @stephenmiller2544

    @stephenmiller2544

    9 күн бұрын

    the man was truly gifted. Sphere is one of my all time favorite books.

  • @light9999

    @light9999

    9 күн бұрын

    If only he'd tried harder!

  • @locustkllr

    @locustkllr

    9 күн бұрын

    Michael Crichton is a mad genius for sure. Lots of great books, some of which were turned into sort of cheesy movies. Im looking at you Timeline. My favorite of his is probably Jurassic Park which is far deeper than the movie, and Prey is a close runner up.

  • @johnmoreland6089

    @johnmoreland6089

    9 күн бұрын

    ​@@Madbandit77Really enjoyed "Coma."

  • @richardb6260
    @richardb62609 күн бұрын

    I think I enjoy your Schmitt Wheel choices the most. It's always something you haven't seen twenty other reactors watch already.

  • @brucedillinger9448

    @brucedillinger9448

    9 күн бұрын

    Exactly. 😊

  • @QueenoftheBlackCoast

    @QueenoftheBlackCoast

    8 күн бұрын

    Yes! It was a great idea.

  • @Joe67343

    @Joe67343

    8 күн бұрын

    The wheel is a good random process, movie could be a winner or a turkey. This one was a winner!

  • @neonsmoviereviews7969

    @neonsmoviereviews7969

    8 күн бұрын

    ⁠@@Joe67343cannot wait for a turkey though, I really hope there’s some Neil Breen on that wheel

  • @johnclawed

    @johnclawed

    6 күн бұрын

    Absolutely. One guy can pick a great movie. A committee only picks the lowest common denominator.

  • @Hyper_Material
    @Hyper_Material9 күн бұрын

    "The Andromeda Strain" has my vote for the most graphic G-rated movie ever.

  • @halcyonlightvibes2023

    @halcyonlightvibes2023

    8 күн бұрын

    Thank you! I watched it a few years ago after not having seen it since I was a kid. I had to check the IMDb for it's rating and was surprised to find a G rating. Ratings sure have changed since the 70s.

  • @maingate7672

    @maingate7672

    8 күн бұрын

    Agreed. Although the nudity wasn't meant to titillate.

  • @christopherconard2831

    @christopherconard2831

    7 күн бұрын

    It was made before the PG rating was created. G ment under 18. After PG came PG-13 because the ratings board kept tightening down and making too many movies R, which cut out too many potential viewers.

  • @halcyonlightvibes2023

    @halcyonlightvibes2023

    7 күн бұрын

    @@christopherconard2831 Correct. But from 1968-1970 there was G for General Audiences, and M for Mature Audiences. From 1970-1972 (this film was releasaed in 1971), there was G for General Audiences (all ages admitted), and GP - all ages admitted - parental guidance suggested (which would end up being PG later on). I think this film should have been GP.

  • @joecarr5412

    @joecarr5412

    4 күн бұрын

    And image of topless woman in beginning in G film 🤔🤔😁

  • @AutoPilate
    @AutoPilate9 күн бұрын

    When Crichton wrote this novel, he basically invented the technothriller. The book was ingenious; it had footnotes to lend it an air of credibility, some (most) of which Crichton invented out of thin air.

  • @RaptorNX01

    @RaptorNX01

    6 күн бұрын

    I loved the side story of Kalocin. in the novel after the doctor gets infected they suggest he take the drug. This leads into Crichton giving the history of it. IE that it was a drug that tests revealed it had insane curative effects. it could cure any disease, even cancer. He talks about how they gave it to a bunch of test subjects, some with cancer, some without. everyone with it was cured, everyone without didn't even develop so much as a cold. it was a true miracle drug. so with it proving successful they stop the test. and within 36 hours ALL the test subjects were dead. The thing was, it killed all disease, all viruses, all bacteria, basically anything foreign to the body. this included good bacteria, stuff living things had collected into their bodies for millions of years that actually prevented other diseases. so all of the test subjects no longer had immunity to all those ancient diseases. They all died of different diseases, ones no living thing had had to deal with for many millennia. I always loved the story because it provides such a theoretical dilemma. would you take a drug that meant you would never get sick again, but in doing so meant you HAD to keep taking it, and if you missed even one treatment you WOULD die a horrific, and possibly messy, death?

  • @johnclawed

    @johnclawed

    6 күн бұрын

    "The Satan Bug" came first, but I never read that.

  • @Patti-sg1fv
    @Patti-sg1fv9 күн бұрын

    This movie was so ahead of its time back in '71. Saw it many times 👍

  • @unwokeneuropean3590

    @unwokeneuropean3590

    9 күн бұрын

    I have adored the 2001 Space Odyssey, and seen it many times. For some reason this movie was boring to me and I only saw it once.

  • @VonLigenstein

    @VonLigenstein

    8 күн бұрын

    check out the miniseries tv mobie... sure the boook will always be the best and so will the original movie... the just modern izzed it a bit hopefully to / for the new kids to look at it but most people still think that'd never haspprn...

  • @Patti-sg1fv

    @Patti-sg1fv

    8 күн бұрын

    @@unwokeneuropean3590 yeah my brothers didn't care much for it either but I was riveted to it especially the intense "self destruct" sequence.

  • @rickardroach9075
    @rickardroach90759 күн бұрын

    16:06 “And due to a miscalculation of scale, the entire battlefleet was accidentally swallowed by a small dog.” - _The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy_

  • @blairhaffly1777

    @blairhaffly1777

    9 күн бұрын

    So long, and thanks for all the fish.

  • @BobCrabtree-ev4rz

    @BobCrabtree-ev4rz

    9 күн бұрын

    Funny,funny book.

  • @tomstanziola1982

    @tomstanziola1982

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@blairhaffly1777The dolphins last message to the humans.

  • @colormedubious4747

    @colormedubious4747

    7 күн бұрын

    You seem like a froody dude who knows where his towel is.

  • @AmatureAstronomer
    @AmatureAstronomer9 күн бұрын

    When the book first came out, I was the supervisor of a microbiology laboratory. As I read it, I kept asking myself, "Is this real?", as it seemed very possible. Then I found out that Michael Crichton had gone to medical school and it all made sense.

  • @lawrencewestby9229
    @lawrencewestby92299 күн бұрын

    In this story Chekhov's gun took the shape of flashing red lights outside the agricultural station. Dr. Ruth Leavitt looked away and shielded her eyes when she was entering the building, saying she didn't like red lights. It was a seemingly unimportant scene at the time but it presaged her epileptic fit in the lab when the zero growth result flashed in red and later in the hallway with the flashing red alert lights. Flashing lights can trigger seizures in people with photosensitive epilepsy.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    9 күн бұрын

    it is why you will get fired or court martialed in several jobs if you do not disclose epilepsy.

  • @mattw65

    @mattw65

    8 күн бұрын

    I'm glad someone pointed this out.

  • @gishgali8354
    @gishgali83549 күн бұрын

    Andromeda Strain was first a bestselling novel by a young Harvard student named Michael Crichton. He would repeat this formula of a group of scientists investigating fantastic phenomena in books and movies like The Terminal Man, Congo, Sphere and eventually Jurassic Park.

  • @aaronbourque5494

    @aaronbourque5494

    9 күн бұрын

    In fact, the formula predated this novel in the form of the 50's British series The Quatermass Experiment, and its sequels.

  • @stevetheduck1425

    @stevetheduck1425

    8 күн бұрын

    Jurassic Park is essentially a remake of his Westworld. Congo is Tarzan without Tarzan, and so on. The Andromeda Strain is somewhat similar not very, of A For Andromeda.

  • @ArlanKels

    @ArlanKels

    7 күн бұрын

    Sphere's setup is very similar to this setup too. I'm still sad they did such underwhelming adaptations of Crichton's books, except for jurassic park...which is still nowhere close to what his book was.

  • @bfdidc6604

    @bfdidc6604

    6 күн бұрын

    @@ArlanKels I would suggest The Great Train Robbery if you haven’t seen it, starring Sean Connery and Donald Sutherland.

  • @kinokind293
    @kinokind2939 күн бұрын

    Sure, Chrichton was great, but let's not forget it was directed by Robert Wise, the man who gave us "West Side Story", "The Sound of Music", "The Day the Earth Stood Still", "The Haunting", and so on. He worked with Orson Welles on "Citizen Kane", for god's sake!

  • @clarencewalker3925

    @clarencewalker3925

    9 күн бұрын

    Spoken like a true cinephile.

  • @aimmethod

    @aimmethod

    9 күн бұрын

    So versatile.

  • @cleekmaker00

    @cleekmaker00

    9 күн бұрын

    Robert Wise also directed a little deal called "Star Trek: The Motion Picture".

  • @thomasfahey8763

    @thomasfahey8763

    8 күн бұрын

    Oh, that guy!

  • @BarryHart-xo1oy

    @BarryHart-xo1oy

    8 күн бұрын

    Thank you for pointing these vital facts out.

  • @twoheart7813
    @twoheart78139 күн бұрын

    Finally made it on a reaction channel, one of my fave " yes, it could happen" sci-fi flicks! "Dude, do not drop this, I will turn this movie off" 🤣 Very enjoyable reaction & commentary.

  • @Cbcw76

    @Cbcw76

    8 күн бұрын

    I think this "Yes, it could happen-!" genre is why I enjoy this film's premise. I remember those NASA missions where 'quarantines' were imposed afterwards. Perhaps the 1966 publication of this novel was using that event as a core element.

  • @MartinBeerbom
    @MartinBeerbom8 күн бұрын

    In the OR scene, you see a tall guy with a reddish beard sitting down in the prep room, behind the glass, at the right edge of the frame. That's novel author Michael Crichton's cameo. He's sitting down because he was freakishly tall (6'9''), and Wise couldn't keep him in frame if he had been standing.

  • @paulaswanson13

    @paulaswanson13

    16 сағат бұрын

    My son is 6’9”. Very tall-yes. Freakishly??? NO!!!

  • @MartinBeerbom
    @MartinBeerbom8 күн бұрын

    It's not the red, it's the fast blinking that triggered Leavitt's epilepsy. Though they made the blinking very slow to not trigger epileptic seizures in the audience.

  • @emilysmith259

    @emilysmith259

    2 күн бұрын

    I was really excited the first time I saw this! As a kid, I had epilepsy and I was thrilled to see a character in a movie - a woman scientist no less - with the same condition as me! Luckily, i grew out of it (I had the minor variety called petit mal the woman in the movie had. The 'staring spells' with the blinking lights are minor seizures) and never suffered a massive seizure like she did. But blinking lights bother me and I still instinctively look away.

  • @alwayswrite2011
    @alwayswrite20119 күн бұрын

    26:12 - Hi there. Insulin dependent diabetic here. Been doing it for almost 50 years. "If he missed his insulin, he'd go..." He'd go a little loopy. Most people don't realize that the brain needs sugar just as much as it needs oxygen to function. Insulin helps to process sugar. Without glucose to fuel the body, it'll start trying to convert fat for energy. The result, however, is that the blood becomes acidic with acetone. Yes, the same stuff that's used in nail polish remover and industrial solvents can wind up in your blood if you can't process sugar. Hope that helps.

  • @VonLigenstein

    @VonLigenstein

    8 күн бұрын

    I lodt s bother bsck near end of 2018 to an "UNKNOWN PNEUMONIA like virus, and complications with type 1 diabetes.... he couldn't keep liquids, let alone solid foods in him for 3 dys ( wguch sucks when u r a diaberic ) 4th day he was abble o kep a cup of milk down... he took an insulin reading... extremly low * DUHHH) so he than grabbed a can of pepsi... when his gf found hom next morning on bathroom floor she said mabe a sip was taken from the can... when corner finshed his autopsy over 2 weeks later he said his blood sugar was extremly high... he also recommend that his body be cremated. When viewing his body ( Before cremationn) Funeradl director and his assistant made sure NO ONE stood within 2' let alone touched hiss body... remember this is befor covid.... So scertain measure are implimented but we learned alot I HOPE from covid... 2' mmm no ... 2 meters... that sounds more reasonale

  • @MrTuubster

    @MrTuubster

    7 күн бұрын

    I am a police officer and when I come across a very drunk or seemingly crazy person that cannot control his limbs, I always ask if the are diabetic or look for an insulinpen.

  • @alwayswrite2011

    @alwayswrite2011

    7 күн бұрын

    @@MrTuubster Also smell their breath. If they're so far gone that they can't think or act appropriately, they may be trying to expel that acetone through their lungs. It'll be what's been described as a "fruity" scent. If you can smell that, get them an ambulance ASAP.

  • @anorthosite

    @anorthosite

    6 күн бұрын

    @@MrTuubster Good For You, Sir ! Around 1990, when I lived in Rochester NY, one night a guy stopped his car blocking my apt driveway. I knocked on his window and asked if he was OK. He seemed not all there, so I called the police to check if he was OK . Two units and at least three (white) officers, apparently assuming he was DUI, loudly verbally "grilled" him (a black man) for several minutes (including demanding to know if he was armed) before eventually calling in EMTs. Sure enough, he was having a diabetic episode. The RPD didn't have a stellar rep for race relations at that time, so maybe I should just have called EMTs instead ?

  • @cajunsushi
    @cajunsushi9 күн бұрын

    Wow, thank you for reviewing this great Sci-fi. I went to the theater at night by myself when I was about 17 and it felt like almost a documentary that night. Scared me half to death.

  • @Lightningrod75

    @Lightningrod75

    9 күн бұрын

    As soon as we got sent home for Covid, I did a double feature of Outbreak and Contagion. I did not feel great after that.

  • @arifeannor9573
    @arifeannor95739 күн бұрын

    The monkey was "killed" by being placed in a large set filled with carbon dioxide. When the monkey's cage, which contained oxygen, was opened the animal was rendered unconscious by the CO2. An assistant director was off camera and brought a breathing apparatus to the monkey, who recovered immediately.

  • @twoheart7813

    @twoheart7813

    9 күн бұрын

    Interesting movie fact, thank you.

  • @michaelschwartz8730

    @michaelschwartz8730

    9 күн бұрын

    Hadn't seen the film for a long time and looked that info up after a recent rewatch. Gotta be honest, the monkey looked like it was suffering imo, even if it wasn't fatal. :/

  • @NoelleMar

    @NoelleMar

    9 күн бұрын

    @@michaelschwartz8730 Yeah, I always thought it was a great actor. Until I found out. 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @DylansPen

    @DylansPen

    9 күн бұрын

    The reactors also mentioned something that I hadn't thought of before, the birds didn't die in Piedmont.

  • @bmw128racer

    @bmw128racer

    9 күн бұрын

    Not carbon dioxide... Carbon monoxide, according to the "making of" this movie.

  • @clayjohanson
    @clayjohanson9 күн бұрын

    Great reaction! Hope you will take a look at “Silent Running”, “THX 1138”, “Phase IV”, and other early 1970s SF classics. PS: The director of this movie, Robert Wise, went on to direct “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” in 1979. Truly a great director with an impressive résumé.

  • @Madbandit77

    @Madbandit77

    9 күн бұрын

    Wise also directed the original "The Day The Earth Stood Still".

  • @dragon-ed1hz

    @dragon-ed1hz

    9 күн бұрын

    And the original "West Side Story."

  • @johnlocke9437

    @johnlocke9437

    8 күн бұрын

    Was about to recommend Phase IV myself

  • @larrybremer4930
    @larrybremer49309 күн бұрын

    I remember this movie being shown in science class in high school as a lesson in the scientific method.

  • @GenXCellent1970

    @GenXCellent1970

    9 күн бұрын

    Wow same here, Biology teacher had us watch it. Fell in love with it then!!

  • @arthurerickson5162

    @arthurerickson5162

    7 күн бұрын

    Same here, but I showed it to my chemistry classes. Had read the book before seeing the film, which became one of my favorites!

  • @frankgesuele6298

    @frankgesuele6298

    7 күн бұрын

    "What did we learn today, Ken?" "Get your ass up to the sub station & deactivate the nuke!"

  • @snorpenbass4196
    @snorpenbass41968 күн бұрын

    Fun fact: the Pentagon has emergency plans for every situation imaginable - from alien invasions to zombie apocalypses. How accurate they are is...hard to determine (seeing as either is highly unlikely to ever happen), but they do have them, and a whole department dedicated to writing them up.

  • @frankgesuele6298

    @frankgesuele6298

    7 күн бұрын

    The beer parties must be awesome😃

  • @RaptorNX01

    @RaptorNX01

    6 күн бұрын

    I think people under-estimate just how weird the government (and esp the military) can get. they always took a "but what if..." view of things. its why i found it hilarious when the "men who stare at goats" thing broke and people would be like, "they would never waste money on that", and i'm like, "oh they sure as hell would. and have". esp during the cold war. It didn't help that it had become known that Hitler had had quite an interest in the occult. So ofcourse they looked into EVERYTHING, from psychic powers, to ghosts and beyond. its kinda why i never batted an eye at the Philadelphia experiment despite it probably never happening. while the whole thing about time traveling warships and people getting melted into bulkheads is pretty sus, the idea they would do some dangerous experiment in an attempt to create cloaking technology is pretty on brand.

  • @johnclawed

    @johnclawed

    6 күн бұрын

    They also have emergency plans for dealing with a pandemic, and then ignored the plan and copied the Chinese policy instead.

  • @SierraSierraFoxtrot

    @SierraSierraFoxtrot

    4 күн бұрын

    They couldn't even build a floating pier in Gaza in less than a month... and it lasted a few weeks and delivered basically zero aid. Doesn't matter if they have a plan, they won't be able to put it into practice.

  • @Kromark
    @Kromark7 күн бұрын

    Out of all the reactors i have watched ( quite a few ) you two are the best. To put in perspective i am a grumpy old man who gets irritated easily by people , but i watch reactors so i can self monologue at how annoying they are. But you two are a the only ones that make me smile and your commentary is wonderful , you also react to films that no one else can be bothered to. Thank you. From a less grumpy old man.

  • @pollynicklas5220
    @pollynicklas52209 күн бұрын

    So many of these movies are rather slow paced - not like today's that feed you everything at a frantic pace! Ithers from that time period that are worth watching - The Omega Man, Soylent Green (relevant today), Logan's Run, also relevant today, Rollerball (1975 version)!! Jonathan - Jonathan - Jonathan - Jonathan! Lol

  • @Madbandit77

    @Madbandit77

    9 күн бұрын

    The sci-fi films of the late 60s/mid 70s are interesting gems.

  • @vlr78

    @vlr78

    9 күн бұрын

    Logan's Run is fantastic

  • @hobbievk5119

    @hobbievk5119

    9 күн бұрын

    Fantastic Voyage is another great film from this period.

  • @bodine57

    @bodine57

    9 күн бұрын

    Rollerball, YES!! Corporate dystopian.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    9 күн бұрын

    Soylent Green had a new york that at 30 mill was overcrowded. give you a hint Soylent Green was dead wrong about everything

  • @MartinBeerbom
    @MartinBeerbom8 күн бұрын

    In the novel, Michael Crichton added a full scientific literature bibliography. It looked frighteningly real and included some of the principal characters as authors. Robert Wise, the director, actually tried to look some of them up and found out that all the references were made up.

  • @robertadams998

    @robertadams998

    6 күн бұрын

    They should definitely check out The Day The Earth Stood Still.

  • @socalpaul487
    @socalpaul4879 күн бұрын

    "The Andromeda Strain" was an incredibly popular book/movie in the early '70's, pre "Star Wars"

  • @susanliltz3875
    @susanliltz38759 күн бұрын

    This movie is so old you guys don’t know any of the actors, but it’s nice for me to see some of these old familiar faces!!!!

  • @Friend_Of_The_Muse

    @Friend_Of_The_Muse

    9 күн бұрын

    Yes. Many were top TV actors of the day. They were everrywhere.

  • @mattw65

    @mattw65

    8 күн бұрын

    Same, but by heck does that date a lot of us.

  • @Divamarja_CA

    @Divamarja_CA

    6 күн бұрын

    @@Friend_Of_The_MuseI almost thought it was a made-for-TV movie!

  • @ZakhadWOW

    @ZakhadWOW

    2 күн бұрын

    53 years old now sheesh.. Only other one I generally remember from this era is Lost Horizon...

  • @harnois75
    @harnois759 күн бұрын

    I would recommend the Sean Connery/Donald Sutherland heist movie written and directed by Michael Crichton - The (First) Great Train Robbery (1978) A great witty exciting period film.

  • @ZakhadWOW

    @ZakhadWOW

    2 күн бұрын

    RIP Donald Sutherland.. left a great film legacy

  • @thomaskennedy1979
    @thomaskennedy19799 күн бұрын

    Your intros have become unhinged and chaotic since you had a baby and I am 100% here for it!! haha!!

  • @ilionreactor1079
    @ilionreactor10799 күн бұрын

    Not only a good movie, it's an IMPORTANT movie. These issues and lessons should be contemplated by us all.

  • @brom00
    @brom009 күн бұрын

    Excellent choice. This was adapted from a book by Michael Crichton, who also wrote Jurassic Park and several others that became movies. For the animal 'deaths'. they weren't harmed. They filled that room with CO₂. The animals were knocked out for a few minutes. The 70's had several great science fiction films. Among my favorites include 'Soylent Green' and 'Silent Running'.

  • @NoelleMar

    @NoelleMar

    9 күн бұрын

    That is definitely harming them, it’s just not offing them. I think there were fewer “protections” for animals on set at that point than there had been before that and then later. (Unless I’m getting the years wrong, which is entirely possible.) Anyway, glad they took care of them all things considered, but still rather grim!

  • @KublaVeruca

    @KublaVeruca

    9 күн бұрын

    You done get more 70's then Silent Running... Bruce Dern, Huey, Duey and Louie...

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie21129 күн бұрын

    This film was praised for its scientific accuracy. One criticism was its slow pace and length. A fantastic film for audiences who like scientific and intellectual thrillers. GREAT reaction! 👍👍

  • @guscarlson7021
    @guscarlson70219 күн бұрын

    Nothing is a great place to start. Awesome film. In 1971, we were on the edge of our seats for the last 5 minutes.

  • @tillasmax
    @tillasmax9 күн бұрын

    If you like this type of sci-fi you should watch Colosus: The Forbin Project (1970), Logan's Run (1976) and Silent Running (1972).

  • @decepticonsretreat

    @decepticonsretreat

    7 күн бұрын

    I was hoping someone would mention Colossus: The Forbin Project, seconding this one for sure

  • @tillasmax

    @tillasmax

    7 күн бұрын

    @@decepticonsretreat this movie is more timely now than it was 50 years ago. very good movie.

  • @ladygeekgirl
    @ladygeekgirl9 күн бұрын

    I love Samantha's response when asked, "what do you know about this movie?" ...nothing 😂

  • @Osprey850

    @Osprey850

    9 күн бұрын

    Almost as funny to me as when she replies "it's a sequel!" 😂

  • @bmw128racer
    @bmw128racer9 күн бұрын

    FYI: A person with epilepsy is very sensitive to flashing lights and it could cause an epileptic seizure.

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski9 күн бұрын

    4:51 "geez. scoop him right out of there... oh, get it, scoop." -Sam "good job babe." -TBR 😊

  • @tomfowler381
    @tomfowler3819 күн бұрын

    Thank you for watching this! One of my favorite movies.

  • @llamallama1509
    @llamallama15098 күн бұрын

    Oh my god, I've been hoping for so long that someone would react to this! I saw the thumbnail in the corner of my eye and clicked immediately! Watching now, can't wait to see what you thought

  • @buffstraw2969
    @buffstraw29699 күн бұрын

    As another person has already commented below, this film was directed by Robert Wise: "West Side Story," "The Sound Of Music," "The Haunting," "Star Trek: The Movie," "The Day The Earth Stood Still," and many others. You mentioned how well the Piedmont sequence was edited, with the split-screen effects. Wise got his start as an editor, and edited Orson Welles' masterpiece "Citizen Kane." So, quite an impressive resume. A very versatile director, working in many genres. I'm so glad you guys reacted to this!!! "The Andromeda Strain" is one of my favorite films. I saw it when it came out in 1971 (I was in junior high school, or "middle school" as it's known today) and it blew me away. I especially liked the score by Gil Melle, a jazzman who also experimented with electronic music. According to Melle, Wise wanted a unique sound. When Melle would play a track he'd just proudly completed, Wise would tell him: "Sounds too much like music. Go back and re-do it." I bought the soundtrack album, and loved it. The vinyl LP wasn't circular, but hexagonal: the same shape as the Andromeda crystal.

  • @Johnny_Socko

    @Johnny_Socko

    8 күн бұрын

    Thank you very much, those are some details that I've never heard before. That LP sounds awesome, it would be amazing to find a copy today.

  • @RaptorNX01

    @RaptorNX01

    6 күн бұрын

    I had never noticed just how many split-diopter shots were in this film until i watched this reaction.

  • @misterkite
    @misterkite9 күн бұрын

    There's a lot of really good 70s scifi. Logan's Run, Silent Running, Dark Star, Solaris, Westworld, Soylent Green, Boy and his Dog.

  • @jayconant3816

    @jayconant3816

    9 күн бұрын

    Yeah they definitely need to watch Logans run!!

  • @conureron3792

    @conureron3792

    9 күн бұрын

    A Boy and his Dog was like a cult film even back in the 70’s. It was pretty wild

  • @aimmethod

    @aimmethod

    9 күн бұрын

    They might enjoy ' _Cassandra Crossing_ ' too.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    9 күн бұрын

    Soylent green is dumb. the original story didn't have them turning dead bodies into food.

  • @kevinstull8552

    @kevinstull8552

    9 күн бұрын

    And then there's a little film that nobody probably has ever heard of that didn't do much of anything that went by the title Star Wars. It must be one of those hard to find films nowadays.

  • @micpar2
    @micpar29 күн бұрын

    Check out Westworld (1973). Written & directed by Michael Crichton. He also wrote Jurassic Park. Westworld is very much like Jurassic Park premise wise. Yul Brynner the gunslinger robot is actually. The original Terminator.

  • @CrowTRobot-ni7zu
    @CrowTRobot-ni7zu9 күн бұрын

    This is one of the most intense films my dad ever introduced me to. Someone in an IMDb review described this film as “Sci-Fi with a capital S,” and I must say, I agree!

  • @blairhaffly1777

    @blairhaffly1777

    9 күн бұрын

    I watched this with my dad when it was released on TV in the seventies. So, I was in elementary school. My impressionistic memory was of flashing red lights with an alarm and something stressful about a ladder. High-level stress and tension bonding. Dad accidentally nurturing my comfort zone of extremely dangerous situations.

  • @wcookejr
    @wcookejr8 күн бұрын

    Because of the influence of this movie, virus researchers refer to the scariest scenario as Andromeda. It's actually part of the lexicon now.

  • @t.j.payeur5331
    @t.j.payeur53319 күн бұрын

    That whole fantastic computer building is now in our phones 53 years later ...

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen9 күн бұрын

    As a kid my friends and I went back to the theater three times over a couple months to see this again, it is really good. Crichton had a lot of medical training and he uses the knowledge with great expertise.

  • @verisimilitudeteller
    @verisimilitudeteller9 күн бұрын

    Miracle Mile with Anthony Edwards, that's an underrated sci-fi movie from the late 80s. I think you guys would enjoy it.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    9 күн бұрын

    not sci fi. thriller. also lots of background full frontal female nudity.

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie21129 күн бұрын

    I always get a kick out of seeing David Wayne (Dr. Dutton), a wonderful actor who played super-villain The Mad Hatter in the 1960's Batman TV series. The Mad Hatter wore a top hat that contained two mechanical eyes, which would hypnotize his victims! 😵‍💫😵‍💫

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski9 күн бұрын

    12:55 "is that a threat?" -Sam 😆

  • @derworfnet
    @derworfnet8 күн бұрын

    Fun fact, I watched this movie for the first time while being scooped up at home at the height of the Pandemic back in 2020. "Eerie" doesn't even begin to describe it. Special shoutout to the freaky, fully-electronic Score by Gil Mellé. Non-instumental Scores were still pretty unusual in 1971. I think the only previous bigger movie to have one was _Forbidden Planet_ from 1956.

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski9 күн бұрын

    2:39 "I don't believe this. thanks Coen Brothers." -TBR scarred for life. hope you got a good chuckle out of it Coen Brothers. 🤨

  • @2715bunky
    @2715bunky9 күн бұрын

    1971 was a great year for films. This was a childhood favorite!

  • @filmschoolslave3794
    @filmschoolslave37949 күн бұрын

    Funny I just watched this a few days ago...I think this is your first Robert Wise movie. He's not talked about as much as some of the other directors you've done - but he's got a hell of a record - including 4 Oscars. This is one of my favorites of his I think. The sets on this are phenomenal, and for a slow, quiet film, it is REALLY INTENSE.

  • @Wanda711

    @Wanda711

    9 күн бұрын

    Me too! A few days it just popped into my mind, and I thought it would be nice to see it again. Must be something in the air... gasp!!!

  • @Madbandit77

    @Madbandit77

    8 күн бұрын

    Wise was the Steven Spielberg of his day.

  • @emadSciFi
    @emadSciFi8 күн бұрын

    Oh, and 'The Last Starfighter'!! You've love it, guaranteed!

  • @hackerx7329
    @hackerx73299 күн бұрын

    Those robotic arms are very real and are commonly used for manipulation of things inside of hot cells while the operator stays safely outside the shielding

  • @TRK-up2zw
    @TRK-up2zw9 күн бұрын

    Wow, never thought this movie would be on a reaction channel. I love the wheel of doom randomness. Visual FX by the master, Douglas Trumbull fresh off "2001." There WERE 1201 and 1202 computer alarms on the lunar descent phase of Apollo 11, which meant data overload. A simulation supervisor named Dick Koos and his team programmed for this in the final simulations, so they were familiar with it.

  • @tsmartin
    @tsmartin9 күн бұрын

    34:28 Andromeda had already mutated to a form that eats plastic so the humans are now safe ... for the time being.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    9 күн бұрын

    actually it ate the pilots flesh leaving only his bones

  • @DNulrammah

    @DNulrammah

    9 күн бұрын

    That is another S/F story - The British TV series "DOOMWATCH" - S1E01 - "The Plastic Eaters".

  • @captainnerd6452

    @captainnerd6452

    6 күн бұрын

    A sequel book was just published recently, set in recent times, involving Andromeda mutating again in the ocean, becoming a new threat. I don't know if Crichton left notes or had been working on a sequel when he passed away, but the premise seems sound.

  • @anorthosite

    @anorthosite

    6 күн бұрын

    @@toomanyaccounts I always thought that they should have left that detail out. In the book, the point was that Polychron had some of the same characteristics as animal tissue, but then you are left with the question of why the mutant strain doesn't also eat people alive.

  • @toomanyaccounts

    @toomanyaccounts

    6 күн бұрын

    @@anorthosite the mutant strain in the lab has mutated to escape the oxygen rich environment of the lab as well as change size and dissolved the polychron however this mutation made it non lethal. the mutant strain in the outside made it go into the upper atmosphere dissolving polychron and human flesh. it would eventually mutate into a harmless form there hence no mass death reports. however the problem is it will mutate again into another form. hence it is very dangerous due to this unpredictably hence the cloud seeding in the hopes of killing it before it mutates again.

  • @nessaarandur7740
    @nessaarandur77406 күн бұрын

    Michael Crichton consistently wrote about the cutting edge of technology and what it might mean for humanity. Biotechnology in Jurassic Park, new species in Congo, AI in Westworld, alien life forms in Andromeda Strain and Sphere, robotics in Prey... He was very good at pointing out how humans try to dominate nature and how it can go terribly wrong.

  • @mattx449
    @mattx4498 күн бұрын

    The set designers went above and beyond for this one. The whole film has a really unique look.

  • @anorthosite

    @anorthosite

    6 күн бұрын

    The curved corridor was a set that they simply re-painted, for scenes on different levels. I think it should have been more gradually curved, since it didn't wrap directly around the central core. But yes, otherwise agreed.

  • @mattx449

    @mattx449

    6 күн бұрын

    @@anorthosite that would have given it a great sense of scale, maybe they were limited by the size of the sound stage?

  • @anorthosite

    @anorthosite

    6 күн бұрын

    @@mattx449 Quite Possible : They actually had to bust up/excavate the sound stage cement floor, in order to fit in the multi-story central core set ! :)

  • @paulkingartwerks7981
    @paulkingartwerks79819 күн бұрын

    Great, great movie. One you can watch over and over and never get tired of it. On my list of my top ten favorite movies!!!

  • @susanalexander6721
    @susanalexander67219 күн бұрын

    Michael Crichton the author of this book, also wrote Jurassic Park. He is one of my favorites.

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian9 күн бұрын

    One of my favorites. Of course I read the book also. Michael Crichton is amazing in all the stories he wrote. He also has a biography of some travels he did. It's called "Travels" of course. The part where he climbs Kilimanjaro is insane. He was also a skin diver and there is a lot in there about that. I highly recommend reading it. Glad you watched and commented on the film. As many have mentioned he wrote a lot of others stories which became films. 'Jurassic Park' 'The Lost World: Jurassic Park' 'Twister' 'Sphere' 'Westworld' 'The Andromeda Strain' **** 'The First Great Train Robbery' 'The Terminal Man' 'Coma' 'Looker' 'Runaway' 'Physical Evidence' 'Disclosure' 'Congo' 'The 13th Warrior' 'Timeline' - TV series, "ER" As we say in Texas; y'all be safe.

  • @williambowman2326
    @williambowman23266 күн бұрын

    The novel came out at the height of the space race. I remember that when Apollo 11 was retrieved , the astronauts, the divers, and the equipment was placed into isolation. Has a 12 year old, Jules Bergman the ABC news space expert, told the audience this was a precaution in case some outer space disease came back from the moon. The thought of some alien virus was a common concern during the Space Race. This plot was very believable at the time. Every kid had grown up watching War Of The Worlds and knew Earths bacteria killed the alien invaders. Many Americans had the concern that space exploration would be the end of life on Earth. This may sound crazy now but after 20 years of fearing nuclear war, space bacteria just added to the quiet panic. Great reactions

  • @ilionreactor1079
    @ilionreactor10798 күн бұрын

    I am gratified to see you exposed to one of the few true SCIENCE fiction movies. "Colossus: The Forbin Project" is a good companion movie to this. Good show!

  • @Vurt.MusicProduction
    @Vurt.MusicProduction9 күн бұрын

    The most SCIENCE of all Science Fiction movies .... still to this date one of my top favorites of all time together with for example "Soylent Green" from just two years later.

  • @2tone753
    @2tone7534 күн бұрын

    This is a film with, as we call it in Germany, “sense and understanding”. A frighteningly timeless theme, a great script and superb actors and, among other things, an outstanding film. The novel, like most of M. Chrichton's, is first rate. Oh, by the way, I was the victim of a cerebral hemorrhage. Before this one, light reflections didn't bother me. Seven years after the hemorrhage, I became an epileptic. Flickering lights like in clubs trigger epileptic seizures in me. Nobody can say why this only occurred seven years after the cerebral hemorrhage. On the other hand, I have needed medication containing the active ingredient carbamazepine for 15 years. What is shown in the film is absolutely correct.

  • @GrumpyOldGuy534
    @GrumpyOldGuy5348 күн бұрын

    Michael Crichton was one of those authors who took available scientific information and ran with it in his novels. More than once he had to explain his novels to the government, as to where he was getting his information

  • @alfredthegreat9543
    @alfredthegreat95438 күн бұрын

    Have always loved this movie since i was a kid in the 70's. One of those you watch again and again every couple of years.

  • @toyfreaks
    @toyfreaks6 күн бұрын

    LOL You thinking the guy on the emergency room table was the one getting called made me realize the effect of the Zucker Brothers on your movie watching reflexes!

  • @workonesabs
    @workonesabs8 күн бұрын

    A very good film and required the audience to know quite a bit of chemistry and physics. Made a long ago and still holds up today.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster679 күн бұрын

    Robert Wise the director also directed The Day The Earth Stood Still in 1951. He's a solid director.

  • @bottle1lack743
    @bottle1lack7438 күн бұрын

    Thes reminds me of what happened in the small town of Claridge in Maryland on the 4th of july 2009, some mysterious infection wiped out almost the whole town. There's a movie about it called 'The Bay" (2012).

  • @chetstevensq
    @chetstevensq9 күн бұрын

    My introduction to Crichton as a wee 10 year old. Actually saw this at the local library at a special screening. Ended up reading all of his books, which as translated to movies this is probably the closest to the book source. Here's hoping they do My Favorite Year some day as it is my favorite Peter O'Toole movie.

  • @LordToddtastic666

    @LordToddtastic666

    9 күн бұрын

    I checked the book out from my local library after watching it and was blown away by it, too

  • @KublaVeruca

    @KublaVeruca

    9 күн бұрын

    Aw man... That IS a good one... overlooked and underrated....

  • @carltonbakerii8274
    @carltonbakerii82744 күн бұрын

    Wow. I’m amazed that someone reacted to this movie! It’s one of my favorites and scared the crap out of me when I saw it on television…at home alone. It’s incredibly well done.

  • @DFWTexan42
    @DFWTexan424 күн бұрын

    Fist saw this movie on UHF when I was a kid in the 70s. Kept me glued to the screen. The realism is why it holds up so well. 53 years ago, seems like last week.

  • @muddhammer7834
    @muddhammer78348 күн бұрын

    The out of the box reactions like this is why I Love you kids. Yeah, Im old

  • @lawrenceschuman5354
    @lawrenceschuman53549 күн бұрын

    This was filmed with a split focus diopter lens. It's an unusual choice that lets the foreground and the background of the shot be in focus.

  • @55tranquility
    @55tranquility9 күн бұрын

    Yes - classic, one of my favourites. Top notch 1970s dystopian sci-fi

  • @themotleycollector
    @themotleycollector2 күн бұрын

    Seeing that real-life satellite come back with samples from space a couple years ago, I couldn't help but think of this movie. One of my all-time favorites. Great reaction vid, too!

  • @emilysmith259
    @emilysmith2592 күн бұрын

    That style of split screen editing is unique to the 70's. it is very stylistic. I personally really enjoy and as you mentioned, it can really add tension in a horror or sci-fi movie when done correctly. I wish more movies would revitalize it again.

  • @aaronmicalowe
    @aaronmicalowe18 сағат бұрын

    I watched this as a young kid. Switched on the TV and had missed the first 5 minutes so just dropped in. Didn't know it was a film because it wasn't done like a film. Was done like a documentary. I only figured out that it was a film when the doctor started feeling the effects of shock, because I realised no documentary could show his view. That made the film more immersive.

  • @markcreemore4915
    @markcreemore49159 күн бұрын

    IMO one of the greatest films of the 70s is The Man Who Would Be King, with Sean Connery, Michael Caine and Christopher Plummer. Directed by the great John Huston. You two would absolutely LOVE this.

  • @kimidri

    @kimidri

    5 күн бұрын

    That is a good movie always watch if comes on tv

  • @bmw128racer
    @bmw128racer9 күн бұрын

    Props to you two for reacting to this excellent movie. Not a lot of action, but it's quite suspenseful and very realistic. BTW, don't bother with the remake... It's a joke in comparison.

  • @SutraRein-xy4qr
    @SutraRein-xy4qr8 күн бұрын

    I bloody loved this film! Elements of it stuck with me for years after. If you liked this then I recommend the film ‘the Satan bug’ made roughly around the same era.

  • @franciscoojeda8986
    @franciscoojeda89869 күн бұрын

    I was delighted you reacted to "The Andromeda Strain" and the original. Thank you and great job.

  • @ricksgamemisc10
    @ricksgamemisc108 күн бұрын

    One of my all-time favorite movies. Saw it when I was much much younger and left a very lasting impression. So thought-provoking.

  • @johngraesser4911
    @johngraesser49119 күн бұрын

    it was more than 50 years ago that i read the book, but as i recall, the key man, the guy carrying the key to stop the self destruct was a secret. the general workers in the facility wouldn't know who he was or why he had the key. other scifi stories around the same time had similar plot devices, i recall a book i read in the 60's or 70's called mutant 59 the plastic eaters, which also had an organism that ate plastics, which nowdays would end civilization as we know it, since everything has some plastic in it.

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess60729 күн бұрын

    My parents took my younger brother and I to a lot of movies as kids - this was one of them. I guess I was around 13. Serious science fiction with real consequences that like War of the Worlds, we have mother earth to thank for keeping us safe. Fantastic Voyage, Soylent Green, 2001 - so much science fiction in film.

  • @toddmitchell7542
    @toddmitchell75429 күн бұрын

    Don’t remember if I read the book first from my dad’s bookcase, or if I bought the book after I saw the movie, one of my favorite movies.

  • @StCerberusEngel
    @StCerberusEngel9 күн бұрын

    From a 60s novel by Michael Chrichton, author of West World and Jurassic Park. This is one of the most hard sci-fi stories ever. The level of detail and intrigue is next level. The idea of a microscopic crystalline organism spreading at a geometric rate is still very unique and very plausible. Essentially, this is the start of a gray goo type event by way of infection.

  • @TheFireMonkey
    @TheFireMonkey8 күн бұрын

    the equipment in the movie was cutting edge in 1970 - not what was in use, but what was under development at the time. Of course, also some was the latest stuff at the time.

  • @IAMCAVE
    @IAMCAVE6 күн бұрын

    I love the fact that while the technology was dated, the story was still suspenseful enough to get you two breathing a sigh of relief when Hall turned the key.😊 It’s an excellent film/story that doesn’t need to be remade.

  • @stephenkoehler4051
    @stephenkoehler40519 күн бұрын

    Classic 70's movie and the first Michael Crichton movie to be brought to the silver screen. Crichton even does a cameo as the surgeon who relieves Dr Hall in the hospital for the operation when he is picked up by the Air Police. The novel itself read like a government report, filled with graphical elements, some of which were in the opening montage and represented by the raster graphics on some of the displays. All the medical equipment in the lab was real. Several medical equipment companies were credited with supplying the Electron microscope, computers and other equipment depicted. The ending was slightly different from the book as well. Instead of Lasers in the central core, a curare was used and hall was falling unconscious due to the effects of the curare poison affecting his system. Also, the bomb was stopped at 35 seconds in the book, but the system would evacuate the air from the lower level, killing everyone before the nuclear "device" would go off to make the detonation easier for some reason (the books explained it, and it been a while since I read it). But in the end, Michael Crichton popularized the technothriller as a genre. In 2008 they did a TV miniseries remake with Benjaman Bratt and Andre Braugher which was interesting, but changed a lot of the setting and can be somewhat recognized from the source material. All in all, you guys did an excellent review. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @ThomasKnip
    @ThomasKnip8 күн бұрын

    I watched that movie on late night TV as a kid, and I couldn't sleep after that one. SciFi for me back then was spaceships and pew, pew, pew, not a lethal lifeform from outer space. 😄

  • @tomm7305
    @tomm73059 күн бұрын

    Glad you stumbled onto this one. Has long been a favorite of mine.

  • @imdiyu
    @imdiyuКүн бұрын

    One of my favourite Sci-fi films ever. Thank you much.

  • @DocMicrowave
    @DocMicrowave9 күн бұрын

    This is a great movie. When I first saw it as a kid, it gave me nightmares. Especially the scene in the core.

  • @D0CI87PC
    @D0CI87PC6 күн бұрын

    A favorite. So many uses of tech & science that weren't either realized (at that time) or not well known at all. One of the many reasons I love sci-fi.

  • @shgreenberg
    @shgreenberg3 күн бұрын

    I read the original book. Still one of my favorites. I remember my dad took me to see this movie in the theater. I was only 12 but already a scientist. The writer actually had a cameo in the movie. Was the tech in the operating room. Still one of my favorite movies to this day.

  • @gumbomudderx7503
    @gumbomudderx75038 күн бұрын

    This was probably the first movie that I read the book before seeing the movie. It’s a really good read too

  • @bcccc132
    @bcccc1328 күн бұрын

    A vastly under rated movie. Another movie called China Syndrome is a movie that at the time mirrored the Three Mile Island incident. It freaked out the whole country.

  • @carlossaraiva8213

    @carlossaraiva8213

    8 күн бұрын

    Sadly it made people stupid about nuclear enery and thus extending our dependency on fossil fuels and now we are paying the price for such stupidity.

  • @harryhill8543
    @harryhill85438 күн бұрын

    I loved the score in this movie, great synths that completely put people on edge. Its meant to be abrasive and ominous and it fits the movie so well.

  • @jasonsumner3386
    @jasonsumner33868 күн бұрын

    Your reaction and analysis/discussion at the end of your videos are the best on KZread. No other KZread channel come close.

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