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The Andromeda Strain By Jeff Shannon
The best-selling novel by Michael Crichton was faithfully adapted for
this taut 1971 thriller, about a team of scientists racing against time to
destroy a deadly alien virus that threatens to wipe out life on Earth. As
usual with any Crichton-based movie, the emphasis is on an exciting clash
between nature and science, beginning when virologists discover the
outer-space virus in a tiny town full of corpses. Projecting total
contamination, the scientists isolate the deadly strain in a massive,
high-tech underground lab facility, which is rigged for nuclear
destruction if the virus is not successfully controlled. The movie spends
a great deal of time covering the scientific procedures of the
high-pressure investigation, and the rising tensions between scientists
who have been forced to work in claustrophobic conditions. It's all very
fascinating if you're interested in scientific method and technological
advances, although the film is obviously dated in many of its details.
It's more effective as a thriller in which tension is derived not only
from the deadly threat of the virus, but from the escalating fear and
anxiety among the small group of people who've been assigned to save the
human race. The basic premise is still captivating; it's easy to see how
this became the foundation of Crichton's science-thriller empire.
Academy Awards
The Andromeda Strain received Academy Awards
nominations for Art Direction/Set Decoration (Boris Leven - Art Direction,
William Tuntke - Art Direction, Ruby Levitt - Set Decoration) and Film
Editing (Stuart Gilmore, John W. Holmes). |
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Robert Wise
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|  | Stars: Arthur Hill, James Olson, David Wayne
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|  | Released: March 12, 1971
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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