THX 1138

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The visionary first film from George Lucas, starring Robert Duvall as a man whose mind and body are controlled by the government. THX makes a harrowing attempt to escape from a world where thoughts are controlled, freedom is an impossibility and love is the ultimate crime. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

Reviews (4)

POMO 

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English THX 1138 is a very distinctive and visually captivating depiction of an unhappy future in which microchips take command over human feelings, needs and desires. At first, the ubiquitous beeping, robotic voices and displays might get on your nerves, but once you get in tune with the story, a thrilling experience with a powerful conclusion awaits you, though it’s perhaps not as shocking today as it was at the time of its release. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English Dystopian science fiction according to young George Lucas. To tell the truth, I didn’t like it, I’d rather watch Star Wars for an entire week than THX 1138 again. ()

gudaulin 

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English Fans of George Lucas are basically divided into two groups: a minority that shrugs their shoulders at how the director was able to create provocative and visionary art sci-fi like THX 1138 and then slide into producing pop culture crap like Star Wars, and a majority that admires the amazing, fun, colorful Star Wars and then realizes that Lucas had previously made some strange pseudo sci-fi without direction or substance, with peculiar hero dialogues and sparse sets, which bears no resemblance to his later great blockbusters. I belong to the first group myself. THX captivated me with its atmosphere of a dehumanized, robotized world that fears emotions and feelings, where the individual is reduced to a sum of money they are valued at. It's a creative matter that accurately reflected the contemporary anxieties among the American intellectual elite at universities. Overall impression: 90%. ()

kaylin 

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English I don't think it's a conceptually bad movie. The message is there. Likewise, I don't think the setting was poorly executed, the tricks are really good, but the overall way it is presented, how it is filmed, just didn't click with me at all. It's almost as if Lucas didn't want anyone to watch it. From someone who directed "Star Wars," it's simply unexpected for me. ()