Saturn 3

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Saturn 3
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Screenplay byMartin Amis
Story byJohn Barry
Produced byStanley Donen
Starring
CinematographyBilly Williams
Edited byRichard Marden
Music byElmer Bernstein
Production
company
Distributed byITC Film Distribution
Release dates
  • 15 February 1980 (1980-02-15) (US)
  • 8 May 1980 (1980-05-08) (UK)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$10 million[1]
Box office$4.9 million[2]

Saturn 3 is a 1980 British science fiction film produced and directed by Stanley Donen, and starring Farrah Fawcett, Kirk Douglas and Harvey Keitel. The screenplay was written by Martin Amis, from a story by John Barry. Though a British production, made by Lew Grade's ITC Entertainment and shot at Shepperton Studios, the film has an American cast and director.

Saturn 3 was a box office bomb and earned largely negative reviews. Keitel's biographer called the film the "nadir of his career".[3]

Plot[edit]

In the distant future, an overcrowded Earth relies on research conducted by scientists in remote stations across the Solar System. Contact is maintained by spaceships shuttling between the stations and large orbiting space stations. Captain James is preparing to depart from one of these stations when he is murdered by Captain Benson. Benson, who was rated "potentially unstable" on a mental exam, kills James and departs from the station using his cargo ship for a small, remote experimental hydroponics research station on Saturn's third moon. Arriving there, he finds the station run solely by Adam and his younger colleague and lover Alex. Adam, Alex, and their dog, Sally, enjoy their isolation far from an overcrowded and troubled Earth. Alex has spent all her life in space, and only knows Earth from what Adam has told her. It falls to Benson to more fully educate Alex as to the habits and mores of humans who live on Earth, which include drug use.

Alex and Adam's idyll is broken when Benson reveals his mission is to replace at least one of the moon's scientists with a robot. The robot — named Hector — is among the first of its kind, a "Demigod Series", relying on "pure brain tissue" extracted from human fetuses and programmed using a direct link to Benson's brain. Adam tells Alex that he is the likely candidate for removal, being that he's close to "abort time" and will have to leave anyway.

With Hector assembled, Benson begins preparing the robot, using the neural link implanted in his spine. Thus connected to Benson, Hector quickly learns of Benson's failure of the psychological stability test, and also of his murder of James. With little barrier between the robot's brain and Benson's, Hector is soon imprinted with Benson's homicidal nature and his lust for Alex. The robot rebels. Adam and Benson manage to disable the robot while it's recharging, and remove the brain.

Believing the danger over, Adam accuses Benson of gross incompetence, ordering him to dismantle the robot and return to Earth when an eclipse ends (this eclipse also prevents communication to other stations). Unknown to Benson, Adam and Alex; Hector remains functional enough to take control of the base's older robots, using them to reassemble his body and reconnect his brain. Unaware of Hector's resurgence, Benson attempts to leave the station while dragging Alex with him. Resuscitated, Hector murders Benson before he can leave with Alex. Hector destroys Benson's spacecraft before the scientists can escape in it, trapping them all on Saturn 3, and assumes control of the station's computer.

Trapped in the control room, both Alex and Adam are surprised to see Benson's face on their monitor. The two are directed by a voice they recognize as Benson's to leave the control room, both surprised that Benson is even alive. To their shock, the two are confronted by Hector, now wearing Benson's severed head.

A short time later, Alex and Adam wake in their own rooms. To her horror, Alex finds that Hector has installed a brain link at the top of Adam's spine, much like the one that Benson had, and one which will give Hector direct access to Adam's brain. Hector explains that he can 'read' but taking control of Adam 'comes later'. This causes Adam to rebel and he destroys Hector by tackling him into a waste pit, and sacrificing himself with a grenade.

In the final scene, Alex is shown aboard a passenger ship returning to Earth. She declines an offer of narcotics from a stewardess, and instead looks out of a window for her first glimpse of Earth.

Cast[edit]

Development[edit]

Scripting[edit]

The project was based on an idea by John Barry, one of the leading production designers of the 1970s, whose credits included A Clockwork Orange, Star Wars and Superman. He pitched it to Stanley Donen when they were making Lucky Lady together and Donen suggested he produce while Barry direct (Donen had no experience in science fiction prior to this).

The script was written by novelist Martin Amis, who did it for a fee of £30,000. According to Amis' biographer, the original script "is at once heroic and pitiable, his various attempts at wit, rhetorical bravado, even elegance, being shoe-horned into a directorial enterprise as boorish as The Vikings."[4]

Donen was making the b-movie spoof Movie Movie for Lew Grade and gave Grade a copy of the script to read. Grade read it while on a plane with Farrah Fawcett. He gave the script to Fawcett who was interested, and Grade agreed to make the movie when the plane landed. Donen later said: "The script wasn't thoroughly realized at the point we signed Farrah Fawcett. We had a starting date when Lord Grade got off that airplane but no script."[1]

Donen later said: "I was rather surprised she said yes in the first place because in the early scripts hers wasn't that big a part."[5]

Fawcett later said the script was originally called The Helper. "It was a very interesting story about how a robot took on the mind of the guy who created him," she said. "So, when the Harvey Keitel character would look at me, the robot he created would look, too. It was a very interesting script, so creative."[6]

The script changed once Fawcett became involved. "We went through all sorts of thoughts," said Donen. "There were times when we had a story where no one was the villain. But I think there was always an age difference between Farrah and the man with whom she was working. I think we were looking for an older rather than a younger man in every version of the story. Yet I don't feel that the script was changed to accommodate the casting of Kirk Douglas."[7]

Other people worked on the script. Amis said that most of the final script was written by Frederic Raphael.[4]

The film was accused of being similar to Alien, but Donen pointed out Barry had the idea several years before that film came out. "It's a pity we didn't get it out first. There is the similarity of the monster villain, but ours doesn't take on the guise of a monster. Ours is beautiful to look at — in a strange way. The alien was a sort of organic reptile with a steel mouth. Ours looks more human — it has legs. And we show ours."[8]

Donen said: "It's probably closer to the real Frankenstein story than an Hitchcock thriller... It's meant to frighten you in an unusual way and give you a sense of relief at the way that it comes out. It's science fiction but not comic-strip... It's also a film that is both sensuous and sensual."[9]

ITC was also producing Raise the Titanic at the same time. As that film went over schedule and over budget, and ultimately failed at the box office, the production of Saturn 3 was cut back.[10]

Casting[edit]

Fawcett's casting was announced in June 1978 (the press release said Donen was directing) and she was paid $750,000.[11] The first choices for the male lead were Sean Connery and Michael Caine, but they turned the part down; Kirk Douglas accepted.[12] Harvey Keitel was cast at a fee of $90,000.[13]

Shooting[edit]

Filming started in late January 1979. Donen says there were difficulties with the actors. "It was my fault, not John's," said Donen. "The truth is John had hardly ever been on a set, which I didn't realize. He was such a terrific talent but ... he knew next to nothing about staging a scene or handling actors. The film started floundering."[14] Donen decided he had to be on set with Barry, but says Barry refused and quit the project. "There was no question of his being fired," said Donen.[14]

Reportedly, the cause was a dispute with Kirk Douglas.[15]

Fawcett said that when Donen started directing, "this film that had been going in one direction, took off in another. Suddenly, there were hair and costume changes, and the story changed."[6]

Stanley Donen was dissatisfied with Harvey Keitel, and the two men had a poor working relationship.[13]

The film cost over $10 million. "That's a lot for a film with three characters," admitted Donen. "The robot cost a lot more than we expected. It was slower to photograph than we thought it would be. And when John couldn't finish directing the picture, that took time."[1]

The director added: "The limitations of the surroundings was another problem. It was like making a movie in a rowboat. To give the movie variety in that one complex where the characters live was very difficult."[1]

In screenwriter Martin Amis's subsequent novel Money, the main character, John Self, is based in part on John Barry (Self's father is named Barry Self as well). The aging film star "Lorne Guyland", obsessed with his own virility, is based on Douglas.[16] Similarly, the project that John Self attempts to complete is as wracked with disaster, as was the production of Saturn 3.

Filming took 15 weeks, after which Fawcett also announced her separation from husband Lee Majors.[17]

Post-production[edit]

Donen wanted Keitel's character to have an upper class veneer to appear more threatening.[13] Because Keitel refused to take part in post-production looping, Keitel's voice is dubbed over by British actor Roy Dotrice who, for this performance, adopted a mid-Atlantic accent.[18]

Two scenes that had been filmed for the production were edited out, due to Lew Grade objecting to their subject matter. These were a dream sequence that involved both Adam and Alex killing Benson and a scene where Hector ripped apart Benson's dead body on a table in one of the colony's laboratories. A scene where Fawcett appeared in a leather outfit with garters, which was on the original poster, is not in the final film. These cuts, among others, reduced the running time to 87 minutes.[19]

Regardless of these cuts, the film received an MPAA rating of "R", for scenes of violence and brief nudity. In the UK, the film was given a more relaxed "A" certificate by the BBFC for its theatrical release, though subsequent home video releases were given a "15" certificate.[20]

Death of John Barry[edit]

Barry went back to production design, joining the crew of The Empire Strikes Back. During pre-production, he suddenly fell ill and died of meningitis.[21]

Reception[edit]

The film was released by AFD, a new company formed by Lew Grade to distribute his films in the US.[22]

Box office[edit]

Lew Grade pre-sold the film to NBC for $4 million, which helped minimize its losses. He wrote in his memoirs: "the effects and the performances were fine but ... the finished product parted company with my original expectations."[23] The film was a financial disappointment and contributed to the collapse of Grade's filmmaking operations.[24]

Critical response[edit]

P. J. Snyder reviewed Saturn 3 in Ares, and commented that: "Saturn 3 is a sloppy, shoddy production, of the sort that someone out there thinks SF fans just eat up. One hopes the producers and directors working the genre will realize this audience demands more than a leggy blond being chased by a robot. They may have such limited visions, but the audience doesn't."[25]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 33% approval rating based on 15 reviews.[26] On Metacritic, the film holds a 9/100 based on reviews from eight critics, indicated as "overwhelming dislike".[27] Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film one star in his review, criticizing its screenplay for having a "shockingly low" level of intelligence, citing moments disregarding the laws of physics, the love triangle between Douglas, Fawcett and Keitel, as well as other details.[28]

Home media[edit]

Saturn 3 was released on VHS by CBS/Fox Video[29] and on laserdisc by CBS/Fox Video, Magnetic Video and ITC Home Video.[30][31][32]

The film was released on DVD by Artisan Entertainment, Geneon Entertainment and Pioneer Entertainment, and again on 3 December 2013 on Blu-ray and DVD by Shout! Factory.[33]

Re-issue[edit]

When the film was broadcast on NBC in mid-1984, a number of scenes that had been edited out the original print had been restored: Adam offering to take Alex to Earth; Alex voicing her concern to Adam about taking Hector outside of the complex; Adam taking Hector outside in the moon buggy; Benson asking how Alex's eye was after her accident; Adam leaving Hector near the shuttle probe; Hector re-entering the colony and sabotaging the outer airlock mechanism to prevent Adam from coming back inside; an extended scene of Benson walking down a corridor; Adam trying to re-enter Saturn 3 and blowing the outer airlock door off with an explosive adhesive; an extended scene of Adam in the decontamination chamber; Alex voicing her worry that Hector might have killed Adam; Alex being dragged away by Benson and yelling at him; Adam embracing Alex and watching Hector drag away Benson's dead body; Adam holding a towel to his head after Benson had hit him with a pipe and claiming that "Hector is no humpty-dumpty"; both Adam and Alex wondering how Hector managed to reassemble itself; and finally both Adam and Alex sharing a laugh over a humorous incident while hiding in the communications room.[citation needed]

Additional music cues were also added to scenes involving the opening credits and Benson's death; in fact, much of Elmer Bernstein's score was removed or reedited.[34]

Awards and nominations[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Brender 1980, p. 21.
  2. ^ Donahue, Suzanne Mary (1987). American film distribution : the changing marketplace. UMI Research Press. p. 300. Please note figures are for rentals in US and Canada
  3. ^ Fine 1998, p. 129.
  4. ^ a b Bradford, Richard (2012). Martin Amis : the biography. Pegasus Books. p. 175. ISBN 9781605983851.
  5. ^ Is Fawcett Running Cold? Los Angeles Times 18 Oct 1979: g24.
  6. ^ a b Spelling, Ian (June 1996). "Two Faces of Farrah". Starlog. No. 227. p. 4.
  7. ^ Brender 1980, p. 22.
  8. ^ Brender 1980, p. 18.
  9. ^ Crawley 1980, p. 30.
  10. ^ Jeff Bond, pg. 4, liner notes, Saturn 3 soundtrack album, Intrada Records.
  11. ^ Gould--The Bad Times Are Over Los Angeles Times 1 June 1978: f16.
  12. ^ Crawley 1980, p. 31.
  13. ^ a b c Fine 1998, p. 130.
  14. ^ a b Brosnan 1980, p. 12.
  15. ^ Saturn 3: The 1980s' Weirdest Sci-fi Movie - Den of Geek
  16. ^ Interview with Martin Amis Archived 4 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Farrah trying to unhyphenate Chicago Tribune 30 July 1979: 5.
  18. ^ Jeff Bond, pg. 6, liner notes, Saturn 3 soundtrack album, Intrada Records.
  19. ^ Brosnan 1980, p. 13.
  20. ^ BBFC (Saturn 3)
  21. ^ "Obituary". Starburst. No. 13. August 1979. p. 34.
  22. ^ FILM CLIPS: A New Dimension for a Brother Act Kilday, Gregg. Los Angeles Times 28 Oct 1978: b11.
  23. ^ Lew Grade, Still Dancing: My Story, William Collins & Sons 1987 p 268
  24. ^ The sinking of the ACC New Statesman; London Vol. 103, Iss. 2654, (29 Jan 1982): 11.
  25. ^ Snyder, P. J. (May 1980). "Film & Television". Ares (2). Simulations Publications, Inc.: 32–33.
  26. ^ "Saturn 3". Rotten Tomatoes.
  27. ^ "Saturn 3". Metacritic.
  28. ^ Ebert, Roger (19 February 1980). "Saturn 3". Chicago Sun-Times. RogerEbert.com.
  29. ^ Amazon.com: Saturn 3 (VHS)
  30. ^ LaserDisc Database - Saturn 3(9004-80)
  31. ^ 14.06.202 on LaserDisc Database
  32. ^ 9004-80 on LaserDisc Database
  33. ^ Shout Factory
  34. ^ Jeff Bond, liner notes, Saturn 3 soundtrack album, Intrada Records.
  35. ^ a b c Golden Raspberry Awards 1980) Archived 6 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ Past Winners Database

Sources[edit]

External links[edit]