Future War

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Future War

VHS cover for the film
Directed by Anthony Doublin
Produced by Dave Eddy
Written by David Hue and
Dom Magwili (story)
Dom Magwili (screenplay)
Starring Daniel Bernhardt
Robert Z’Dar
Travis Brooks Stewart
Kazja
Andre Scruggs
Ray Adash
Mel Novak
Music by Arlan H. Boll
Cinematography Cory Geryak
Ed Tillman
Editing by Dave Eddy
Distributed by Screen Pix Home Video
Release date(s) January 28, 1997 (USA)
Running time 90 min.
Language English
Budget Unknown
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Future War is a 1997 science fiction film about an escaped human slave fleeing his cyborg masters and seeking refuge on Earth. It was featured in a 1999 episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

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[edit] Plot

Future War begins with a sequence aboard a spaceship where a revolt is under way. We see someone enter an escape pod and then jettison it from the ship where it crashes in the Pacific Ocean on Earth. The pod contains “The Runaway,” a nameless human slave played by Daniel Bernhardt. He is being pursued by his cyborg enslavers and the dinosaurs that they use as “trackers.” Having been kidnapped from Earth’s past, the Runaway has some familiarity with the English language and the King James Bible and regards Earth as a literal heaven.

The Runaway finds refuge with an ambivalent novitiate played by Travis Brooks Stewart, who had formerly dealt drugs and worked as a prostitute. Together, they band together to fight the dinosaurs and their robotic masters, seeking aid from a street gang.

Future War makes use of star Daniel Bernhardt’s skill at kickboxing and features several kickboxing fight sequences, particularly against the Cyborg Master character, played by Robert Z’Dar.

After being arrested by the police for being a suspect in a rash of recent deaths due to strange animal attacks, The Runaway is interrogated by several federal agents where they present him with a collar that was found on the beach. The Cyborg Master, however breaks into the police station (in a scene very reminiscent of The Terminator), and the Runaway manages to escape in the confusion. He teams up with Sister Ann and her friends from the street to attack the dinosaurs where they live, as Runaway explains, "Near Water". He is successful in dynamiting a water treatment plant and killing the dinosaurs, but the Cyborg Master attacks him once more while he is attending Sister Ann’s confirmation. After he kills the Cyborg Master, he becomes a counselor for runaway teens along with Sister Ann.

This was the directorial debut of Anthony Dublin, the award winning special effect/miniature model maker from films like "Bride of Re-Animator" and the "Carnosaur" films. As a side note the actual "tracker" feet and mechanical tracker from "Future War" were taken (stolen) by Dublin for use in "Carnosaur 3". (To see the repainted "tracker" in C3 look here: http://www.clubdesmonstres.com/carno3jo01.jpg)

[edit] Mystery Science Theater 3000

Future War has the distinction of being the most recent film ridiculed in an episode of movie-mocking television comedy series Mystery Science Theater 3000 (Future War was released in 1997, while the MST3k episode mocking it aired in April 1999). Mike Nelson and his robot friends mocked the general cheapness of the movie (several scenes are filmed at a warehouse where people are stacking empty cardboard boxes), the use of forced perspective filmmaking for the dinosaur sequences, and the generally nonsensical nature of the film. As Crow T. Robot remarks at one point, “It’s not the future, and there isn’t a war, but you know me; I don't like to complain.”

During production several crew members remarked that the film should end up on Mystery Science Theater 3000. [1] When Dublin finished his work, he turned in a director's cut of the film that ran about 40 minutes of mostly dialog. Future War was screened for several key members of the crew. After the screening a discussion was held where Doublin quit, forcing a "Damage Control Unit" to be put together. Johnny Saiko from Steve Wang FX was brought in to take over the "trackers" and the film was completed and screened at AFM.

[edit] Notable cast

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[edit] External links

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