The Black Hole By Sean Axmaker
Disney's foray into big-budget science fiction, close on the heels of Star
Wars, had some of the most impressive special effects to grace theater
screens in the 1970s. Graced by handsome production design--most notably a
glass and latticework interstellar craft that looks like a battleship
crossed with a modern skyscraper--The Black Hole is in many ways
the most beautiful science fiction film of its era. Unfortunately, the
graceful and gorgeous picture is jarred by dialogue that wouldn't pass
muster in a comic book and a silly conclusion that plays like a murky,
dime-store knockoff of 2001. Too bad, because the visual
realization of the film is a veritable haunted house of futuristic
phenomena, from the cloaked zombie-like drones shuffling through corridors
to the devilish, crimson robot Maximillian, the strong arm of the mad
scientist played by Maximilian Schell (a kind of wild man Captain Nemo
with an even more ruthless temperament). Only the way-too-cute robot
V.I.N.CENT (voiced by Roddy McDowall), a merchandising gimmick that looks
like a Fisher-Price toy, mars the technological landscape. Robert Forster
is the quietly authoritative captain of an exploration ship that stumbles
across the seemingly derelict ship, and Anthony Perkins, Yvette Mimieux,
Ernest Borgnine, and Joseph Bottoms fill out his crew. This is one case of
a triumph of art direction and special effects over story--it's worth
sitting through it to see the magnificent scene of the fireball rolling
through the ship's enormous hull alone. The rest is just atmospheric
gravy.
Academy Awards
The Black Hole received Academy Awards
nominations for Cinematography (Frank Phillips) and Special Visual Effects
(Peter Ellenshaw, Art Cruickshank, Eustace Lycett, Danny Lee, Harrison
Ellenshaw, Joe Hale). |