Looker

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Looker
Looker imp.jpg
original film poster
Directed byMichael Crichton
Written byMichael Crichton
Produced byHoward Jeffrey
Starring
CinematographyPaul Lohmann
Edited byCarl Kress
Music byBarry De Vorzon
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • October 30, 1981 (1981-10-30)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$8-12 million[1][2]
Box office$3,281,232[3]

Looker is a 1981 American science-fiction film[1] written and directed by Michael Crichton and starring Albert Finney, Susan Dey, and James Coburn.[4] The film is a suspense/science-fiction piece that comments upon and satirizes media, advertising, television's effects on the populace, and a ridiculous standard of beauty.

Though sparse in visual effects, the film is notable for being the first commercial film to attempt to make a computer-generated, three-dimensional, solid-looking model of a whole human body. However, as with its predecessors Futureworld, Star Wars, and Alien, this was an example of "CGI representing CGI", and only depicted on CRT screens in the movie, rather than being used as a special effect. The model had no skeletal or facial movements and was not a character. Looker was also the first film to create three-dimensional (3D) shading with a computer,[5] months before the release of the better-known Tron.

Plot[]

Dr. Larry Roberts (Finney), a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon, is puzzled when four beautiful models working in television commercials request cosmetic surgery to make changes so minor as to be imperceptible to the naked eye. When these models later start dying under mysterious circumstances, he discovers they are all linked to the same advertisement research firm.

The Digital Matrix research firm rates advertising models using a scoring system to measure the combined visual impact of various physical attributes in television commercials. In an experiment to increase their scores, some models are sent to Dr. Roberts to get cosmetic surgery to maximize their visual impact. Though the models are physically perfect after the surgery, they still are not as effective as desired, so the research firm decides to use a different approach. Each model is offered a contract to have her body scanned digitally to create 3D computer-generated models, then the 3D models are animated for use in commercials. The contracts seem to be incredibly lucrative for the models; once their bodies are represented digitally, they get a paycheck for life, never having to work again, since their digital models are used for all their future work in commercials.

However, when these same models start dying under mysterious circumstances, Roberts becomes suspicious and decides to investigate Digital Matrix. He has a strong interest in investigating the deaths: he is considered a prime suspect by the police (from evidence planted at the scene of one of the murders) and his most recent patient, Cindy (Susan Dey), with whom he begins a romantic relationship. Cindy is the last of the models to be digitally scanned.

During his investigation, Roberts discovers some advanced technology that the Digital Matrix corporation is using to hypnotize consumers into buying the products they advertise. He also discovers a light pulse device, the Light Ocular-Oriented Kinetic Emotive Responses (L.O.O.K.E.R.) gun, that gives the illusion of invisibility by instantly mesmerizing its victims into losing all sense of time.

Cast[]

Production[]

Crichton started thinking about the subject of the film in 1975.[6] He says he went to a Los Angeles computer company to find out how they could create copies in commercials without looking too ridiculous and discovered a company in Texas was already doing it, called tomography.[7]

Looker became an early production of The Ladd Company.[8] It was Leigh Taylor-Young's first film in eight years.[9]

James Coburn later said "My part was pretty much on the cutting room floor. They really pissed that film away. They had Albert Finney running around in a security guard's uniform throughout the film. It didn’t make any sense. It could have been a good picture. It was about how television controls. It was about how commercials manipulate people to buy products, politicians, whatever. But, they cut the film up for a television print. I don't know why they did that. They spent some bread on the picture too. It was a $12 million production. That’s not much today, but back then it was a pretty big budget."[2]

Reception[]

Looker was poorly received by critics. The film holds a 32% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 22 reviews.[10] It was not a success at the box office.[3]

See also[]

  • Timeline of CGI in film and television

References[]

  1. ^ a b Looker at the American Film Institute Catalog
  2. ^ a b Goldman, Lowell (Spring 1991). "James Coburn Seven and Seven Is". Psychotronic Video. No. 9. p. 28.
  3. ^ a b "Looker (1981) - Financial Information". The Numbers (website).
  4. ^ "Looker". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved August 13, 2016.
  5. ^ Visual and Special Effects Film Milestones from Filmsite.org
  6. ^ Warga, Wayne. (Mar 1, 1981). "Fact, Fiction Intertwined By Crichton". Los Angeles Times. p. m22.
  7. ^ Buckley, Tom (6 February 1981). "AT THE MOVIES; How Resnais made a success with science. (Published 1981)". The New York Times. p. C12.
  8. ^ Pollock, Dale (Aug 6, 1980). "Film Clips: All Geared Up With Nowhere To Go". Los Angeles Times. p. i3.
  9. ^ "Roderick Mann: Leigh Taylor-Young Returns To The Scene". Los Angeles Times. Jan 8, 1981. p. h1.
  10. ^ "Looker (1981)". Rotten Tomatoes.

External links[]

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