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Silent Running (1972)
In Douglas Trumbull's directorial debut film - it was
a low-budget, groundbreaking, classic sci-fi environmental-message
movie with its speculative vision of a dystopic eco-disaster, and
the results of ecological preservation in space; the environmental
disaster story with a socially-conscious message told about the aftermath
of a climate catastrophe (with a greenhouse effect causing temperatures
to stabilize at 75 degrees), efforts to locate new planets to populate
or terraform, and the eventual goal to return carefully-tended plants
to Earth for reforestation. The film served as an inspiration for
two other similar films: Disney's animated feature Wall-E
(2008) and Moon (2009).
Visual effects pioneer Trumbull was previously responsible
for the special effects for 2001:
A Space Odyssey (1968), and his future films included
Oscar-nominated Special Effects for Close
Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), Star
Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), and Blade
Runner (1982).
The script was co-written by Deric Washburn,
future director Michael Cimino, and Steven Bochco. Funded on a budget
of $1 million without an expensive advertising campaign, the film
flopped at the box-office, but was revived as a cult film by viewings
on television. It resonated with the late 1960s counter-cultural
movement and concerns about the environment. The three anthropomorphized
drone robots, Dewey, Huey and Louie were the first non-humanoid film
robots that were propelled to walk and operated by four human bilateral
amputee actors (who walked on their arms) hidden inside their boxy
frames. Trumbull had acquired the idea of using human amputees inside
the drone units from Tod Browning's Freaks
(1932). Later, the drones became an inspiration for Star
Wars' R2-D2 robot. Peter Schickele's
retro soundtrack featured two songs by famed folk singer Joan Baez.
The early 1970s film's tagline was: "Amazing companions
on an incredible adventure...that journeys beyond imagination!"
- the film's opening titles were accompanied by
close-ups of blossoming flowers in a moist forest ecosystem or
idyllic arboretum, and woodland creatures including a snail, a
turtle, a croaking frog and cute frolicking bunnies
- long-haired, non-conforming
hippie loner and botanist-ecologist Freeman Lowell (Bruce Dern)
was observed swimming within the fertile forest surroundings; and
then, as he fed one of the bunnies, the camera pulled back to reveal
that the robed man was onboard the USS Valley Forge; a voice-over
from Squad Commander Anderson
(voice of Roy Engel) during a farewell speech, described the futuristic
mission: "On this first day of a new century [January 1, 2000],
we humbly beg forgiveness and dedicate these last forests of our
once beautiful nation to the hope that they will one day return
and grace our foul Earth. Until that day, may God bless these gardens
and the brave men who care for them"
- the Valley Forge was one of a fleet of eight
converted and orbiting space-freighters (sponsored by American
Airlines) in outerspace circling around Saturn; he was inside a
transparent, pressurized greenhouse geodesic biodome attached to
the ship - one of the freighter's six domes
- maintenance for the ship was provided by three
beautifully-designed, faceless, silent, ecologically-friendly,
anthropomorphic drones or robots with short legs, originally with
dull names: Drone # 1, Drone # 2, and Drone # 3 (Mark Persons,
Steven Brown, Cheryl Sparks and Larry Whisenhunt)
- the other freighters besides the USS Valley
Forge were all named after US national parks - the Berkshire,
Sequoia, Yellowstone, Acadia, Blue Ridge, Glacier, and Mojave
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One Geodesic Greenhouse Dome Atop a Large Cargo
Spaceship
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The Fleet of Eight Massive Cargo Spaceships with
Geodesic Domes
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- the monk-robed, off-beat, outcast elder Lowell and
his younger, slovenly crew were half-way through a year-long mission
to preserve, cultivate and tend to the last remaining plant specimens
stripped from a radiation-devastated planet Earth; caring deeply
for the plants he was tending, the dedicated Lowell seemed to be
the only one fulfilling the mission; he became upset with his three
other coarse, disruptive and irresponsible fellow crew members,
all forest-rangers: Andy Wolf (Jesse Vint), Marty Barker (Ron Rifkin),
and John Keenan (Cliff Potts); the threesome were acting callously
and insensitively by noisily racing and driving wildly in motorized
cart-vehicles (or ATVs) throughout the freighter and regularly
desecrating the delicate environment of the biodome and running
through the flower-beds; Lowell threw his rake at them in anger;
the group spent most of their time playing poker or pool
Freeman Lowell (Bruce Dern)
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John Keenan (Cliff Potts)
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Andy Wolf (Jesse Vint)
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Marty Barker (Ron Rifkin)
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- the group was awaiting an important transmission
from Con Central; although Keenan predicted cut-backs in their
program, the well-qualified Lowell was hoping and 'dreaming,' after
8 years of working in space on the project, that he might be promoted
to Director of the parks and forest system, to repopulate the Earth
with trees, flowers, vegetables
and fruits: ("What's gonna happen if these forests and all this
incredible beauty is lost for all time?")
- the brief transmission from Squad Commander Anderson
to the ship referenced executive order A.U.C.
3423 - the USS Valley Forge was ordered to begin the next morning "to
abandon, then nuclear destruct all the forests, and return our
ships to commercial service" - it meant jettisoning and destroying
all of the geodesic greenhouse domes, with "no explanation" for
the abrupt turn-around; Lowell reacted with a stony stare and uttered:
"It's insane!"
- Joan Baez' rendition of the film's theme song "Silent
Running" played as Lowell entered the freighter's domed structure to look lovingly
at the plants about to be destroyed - the song urged future
generations to cultivate and harvest the land: ("...Gather
your children To your side In the sun Tell them All they love will
die Tell them why In the sun Tell them It's not too late Cultivate
One by one Tell them to harvest And rejoice in the sun")
- the next morning at breakfast, Lowell's fellow crew
members derisively joked at him when he cut open a fresh cantaloupe,
and called it "real food" grown in the dirt - different
from their preferred "dried, synthetic" food from a dispensing
unit: ("This happens to be nature's greatest gift"); he attempted to convince
them of its uniqueness and appetizing taste:
"I picked it and I fixed it. And it has a taste, and it has
some color! And it has a smell! And it calls back a time when there
were flowers all over the Earth! And there were valleys! And there
were plains of tall, green grass that you could lie down in, that
you could go to sleep in! And there were blue skies, and there
was fresh air! And there were things growing all over the place,
not just in some domed enclosures blasted some millions of miles
out into space!"
- Lowell criticized John for offering the same three
reasons to return to Earth: "There's hardly any more disease.
There's no more poverty. Nobody's out of a job"; instead,
with a sharp retort, he reminded John of what he was truly missing
in life: "There is no more beauty, and there's no more imagination.
And there are no frontiers left to conquer," and everyone's
attitude was the same - apathy: "Nobody cares!"; with
tears in his eyes, he bemoaned the fact that a little girl wouldn't
grow up with leaves and trees; he begged his fellow workers to
not destroy the irreplaceable domes:
"Please don't blow up the domes!"
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The Nuclear Bombs Ready to be Armed or Deployed and Detonated
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- they ignored his pleadings; soon after, domes were
being blown up from the nearby Berkshire freighter; after
the threesome prepared to detonate their own freighter's domes,
the agitated Lowell became visibly angry after four of the six Valley
Forge domes were jettisoned six miles out and destroyed with nuclear charges; upset
and crazed, Lowell rebelled and refused to allow any more domes
to be destroyed, and decided to save the animals and plant life and
refoliate Earth with the last surviving vegetation
- to carry out his plan, Lowell blocked the path of
crewmate John Keenan who arrived in one of the motorized carts
to plant explosives in his favorite "forest" dome; they
struggled together and Lowell's left leg was struck and injured;
he murdered Keenan with strangulation by pushing a shovel handle
against his neck - he reiterated: ("You can't blow up this
forest!")
- with a bloody left leg and limping to the control
room, Lowell killed the two other crewmen, Marty and Andy, by trapping
them in the second-to-last dome - he jettisoned the dome with them
inside before it exploded; now, there was only
one remaining forest dome
- Lowell radioed for the three ship's service
robots (# 1, # 2, and # 3) to return to the main cargo area before
executing his hijack plan; meanwhile, all of the other freighters
reported that they had fully completed the jettisoning process;
Lowell communicated to Captain “Big Billy” Neal (Joseph
Campanella) on the lead ship, the Berkshire, that
there were problems with the main coupling and the ship was uncontrollably
accelerating toward Saturn
Maintenance Robots With Their Original Number-Names
and New Names
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Drone # 1 (Dewey, grayish-blue) in Closeup
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The Three Drones Ordered to Return to the Control Room
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2-Huey (orange), 3-Louie (green), 1-Dewey (grayish-blue)
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- when pressed to finish his own jettisonings, Lowell
staged a trick explosion that deliberately sent the USS
Valley Forge toward Saturn and its outer rings; he relayed
how the premature detonation of Valley Forge's Dome # 2
had also caused explosive collateral ship damage and a hull breach
in the main cargo deck (simulated by cargo modules off the starboard
side thrown into space by the drones); Lowell then frantically
reported that Wolf, Barker, and Keenan had been accidentally ejected
in the dome and blown up
- to further execute his hijack plan, Lowell notified
lead commander Anderson that he was unable to change his course toward
Saturn due to the irreparable damage; he was advised it would be
an extremely risky and dangerous passage and he might die: "It's
a very bad angle. You know, these ships weren't built to shoot the rapids"
- Lowell reprogrammed the three innocent and protective robots to
answer and respond to him only, and then ordered them to report
to the surgical room immediately, to help perform an operation
on his bleeding leg; Drone # 2 (orange) would perform the surgery,
while Drone # 3 (green) would handle the oxygen and anesthesia,
and Drone # 1 (grayish-blue) would assist
Oxygen and Anesthesia During His Own Surgery
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# 2 Drone (orange) Performing the Surgery
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# 1 Drone (grayish-blue) Assisting With an Extended
Arm
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- after the successful surgery as Lowell was navigating
toward the outer rings of Saturn, Anderson suggested that he might
consider committing suicide before the catastrophic event, and
that a search party would be dispatched for him on the other side
of Saturn; Anderson ended the conversation with praise: "God
bless you, Freeman. You're a hell of an American"; Lowell replied:
"Thank you, sir. I think I am," and laid down for a long-needed rest
- during the fierce, rough and turbulent passage around
Saturn, Lowell watched on a monitor as # 3 Drone (green) was lost
when it was blown off the outside of the ship; one of its feet
became stuck in the grating and was left behind; after emerging
on the other side (with the ship and single dome intact) and proceeding
further into deep space, Lowell instructed the two surviving robots
(# 1 and # 2) to bury murdered crewman Keenan's body in the biodome;
he offered a brief, regretful prayer for the deceased crew members,
summarizing how they weren't his friends, but that he still liked
them: ("I don't think that I'll ever be able to excuse what it is that I
did, but I had to do it"), before Keenan's body was covered with dirt
- as they continued to journey into deep space, the
two remaining drones (# 1 and # 2) - Lowell's sole companions,
were renamed after Donald Duck's nephews: # 1 became Dewey (grayish-blue)
and # 2 became Huey (orange); # 3 (green) was posthumously renamed
Louie; they would still perform their accustomed duties to provide
maintenance for the ship, but in addition, they would function
as Lowell's new family of pet-like "boys" (who responded
with squeaks and flashing lights)
Renaming the Two Drones, Lowell's Two New Companions
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Lowell With Two Remaining Robots In the Biodome Forest, Teaching Them to Plant
a Tree
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The Conservation Pledge
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- after a difficult attempt to teach the drones
how to plant a tree, and as Lowell attended to further horticultural matters,
Joan Baez provided accompaniment by singing: "Rejoice
in the Sun" ("Earth between my toes And a flower
in my hair That's what I was wearing when we lay Among the ferns...");
next to Lowell's bed was a small poster with a Conservation Pledge,
to preserve the forests (and "protect little trees") for childrens'
future: ("I give my pledge as an American to save and faithfully
to defend from waste the natural resources of my country -- its
soil and minerals, its forests, waters, and wildlife")
- over time, Lowell's feelings of loneliness and underlying
guilt grew deeper in the isolated environment, prompting him
to miss human companionship (he had brief flashbacks of his fellow
crew members, remembering how he had murdered them); his mental
well-being also began to suffer; he adopted some of his co-workers'
neglectful habits and coarse behavior that he had criticized them
for; he started to recklessly go joyriding in one of the motorized
cart-buggies; to simulate having friends, he invited (and programmed)
the two robots to play poker with him in the recreation room, and
although one-sided, he pretended to be carrying on a meaningful
dialogue with them; he also began to regularly eat synthetic food
Lowell - Bored and Restless
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Robots Programmed to Play Poker With Him
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Eating Synthetic Artificial Food
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- one day, he suspected that his irresponsible actions
had led to signs that the biodome was mysteriously dying and the
plants were inexplicably wilting and turning brown ("What has happened
to the forest?"); he felt that his mission to save the forest
was failing; Lowell became frantic as he tried to study, investigate
and solve the dome's growth problems, but couldn't find out what
was wrong; as he drove in a motorized buggy to the biodome to meet
with Huey, he carelessly struck and seriously damaged the robot in
one of the ship's corridors
- grief-stricken and apologetic, he struggled
in an attempt to repair Huey's dented frame and one unusable
extension arm, but failed and felt miserable
for causing the accident; Lowell was depressed and downtrodden
for other reasons too: "It's just not working. The forest is dying.
I have tried everything"; he was showing signs of disregard for
cleaning up after himself - plates of half-eaten food
were scattered around the cabin
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After Crashing Into Huey with a Buggy,
Lowell Attempting to Repair the Heavily-Damaged Robot
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- and then, Lowell received a radio transmission from
the nearby sister ship-freighter, the Berkshire, on a rescue
mission; he feared that his sabotage of the mission would eventually be discovered; Anderson
explained how the forest dome had to be jettisoned and safely abandoned
(without blowing it up in the darkness of space) since it wouldn't
survive due to its extreme distance from the sun; Lowell also learned
that he would be picked up and rescued in just six hours
- Lowell suddenly realized the reason for the biodome's
slow death; it wasn't due to neglect, but to a lack of sunlight that
prohibited photosynthesis: ("It's the sun....We can still
save the forest!"); to correct the situation inside the biodome, Lowell installed a
series of bright artificial arc lights-lamps
- then, he instructed the fully-functioning
drone Dewey to remain in the last remaining, well-lit dome to tend,
take care of, and maintain the forest plants: ("I've taught you everything
that I know about taking care of the forest here. And, uh, that's
all that you have to do from now on, is just maintain
the forest. Now, these lights here will do the job that the sun would
do. They'll help revive everything. I, uh, I just can't do it anymore.
You see, things, uh, things just haven't worked out for me. Take
care of yourself, Dewey"); he tearfully bid Dewey farewell before jettisoning the biodome
to safety, to preserve it, and again spoke his final goodbye to
Dewey in voice-over: ("Take good care of the forest, Dewey")
- Lowell returned to the main
ship with the injured Huey, and self-sacrificially prepared nuclear
charges to destroy the Valley Forge (with himself
and Huey on board), only two hours before
docking; with the film's final lines of dialogue, Lowell told Huey: "You
know, when I was a kid, I put a note into a bottle, and it had
my name and address on it. And then I threw the bottle into the
ocean. And I never knew if anybody ever found it"
- after the Valley Forge was obliterated with
nuclear charges, Dewey was seen drifting off into the cosmic darkness
of deep space, but was successfully caring for the forest
of young trees in the brightly-lit biodome (using Lowell's old-fashioned,
colorful, battered watering can); the film concluded with Joan
Baez's repeat rendition of the film's theme song
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Exterior View of American Airlines Space-Freighter - Valley Forge
Freeman Lowell (Bruce Dern)
Lowell's Stunned Reaction to the Order to Destroy All Six of
His Freighter's Geodesic Domes: "It's Insane!"
Lowell Lovingly Tending to the Plants About to be Destroyed in the Dome
At Breakfast, Lowell Preaching the Virtues of Naturally-Grown Food vs.
Synthetic Food
Cute Bunnies - Unaware of Their Possible Fate
Domes Ejected and Blown Up From the Nearby Berkshire Freighter
The Upset Lowell Hearing the Blasts and Seeing the Light From the Destruction
of the First Few Domes
Facing Off and Not Allowing Another Dome to Be Jettisoned and Blown Up
Murder of Crewman John Keenan
Lowell Trapping the Other Two Crew Members In the Second-to-Last Dome and
Jettisoning Them Out into Space to be Blown Up
Ejected Cargo Modules to Simulate an Accidental Explosion as
the Ship Entered the Outer Rings of Saturn
Lowell's Bloodied, Injured Left Leg
The Risky Course of Valley Forge Through Saturn's Rings
The Three Robots on the Outside of the Freighter-Ship During Space Turbulence
Lowell Thrown Around During the Rough Passage Around Saturn
The Drones' Burial of the Murdered Crewman
Lowell Installing Bright Lamps to Save the Dying Plants in the Forest (Within
the Last Biodome)
Lowell's Final Instructions to Dewey to Tend and Care For
the Forest
A Tearful Goodbye: "Take care of yourself, Dewey"
Jettisoning the Last Biodome Into Space
Preparing Nuclear Charges to Destroy the Valley Forge, While
Sharing Early Memories with Huey
Dewey Seen Caring For the Biodome in Deep Space with Lowell's
Colorful, Battered, Old-Fashioned Watering Can
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