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The Andromeda Strain

  • 1971
  • G
  • 2h 11m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
43K
YOUR RATING
James Olson and Robert Soto in The Andromeda Strain (1971)
Clip: Escaping with infection
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Alien InvasionMysterySci-FiThriller

Top scientists work feverishly in a secret, state-of-the-art laboratory to discover what killed the citizens of a small town and how the deadly contagion can be stopped.Top scientists work feverishly in a secret, state-of-the-art laboratory to discover what killed the citizens of a small town and how the deadly contagion can be stopped.Top scientists work feverishly in a secret, state-of-the-art laboratory to discover what killed the citizens of a small town and how the deadly contagion can be stopped.

  • Director
    • Robert Wise
  • Writers
    • Michael Crichton
    • Nelson Gidding
  • Stars
    • James Olson
    • Arthur Hill
    • David Wayne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    43K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Wise
    • Writers
      • Michael Crichton
      • Nelson Gidding
    • Stars
      • James Olson
      • Arthur Hill
      • David Wayne
    • 269User reviews
    • 109Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Andromeda Strain
    Clip 1:49
    The Andromeda Strain

    Photos103

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    Top cast75

    Edit
    James Olson
    James Olson
    • Dr. Mark Hall
    Arthur Hill
    Arthur Hill
    • Dr. Jeremy Stone
    David Wayne
    David Wayne
    • Dr. Charles Dutton
    Kate Reid
    Kate Reid
    • Dr. Ruth Leavitt
    Paula Kelly
    Paula Kelly
    • Karen Anson
    George Mitchell
    George Mitchell
    • Jackson
    Ramon Bieri
    Ramon Bieri
    • Major Manchek
    Kermit Murdock
    Kermit Murdock
    • Dr. Robertson
    Richard O'Brien
    Richard O'Brien
    • Grimes
    Peter Hobbs
    Peter Hobbs
    • General Sparks
    Eric Christmas
    Eric Christmas
    • Senator from Vermont
    Mark Jenkins
    Mark Jenkins
    • Lt. Shawn (Piedmont team)
    Peter Helm
    Peter Helm
    • Sgt. Crane (Piedmont team)
    Joe Di Reda
    Joe Di Reda
    • Wildfire Computer Sgt. Burk
    • (as Joe DiReda)
    Carl Reindel
    Carl Reindel
    • Lt. Comroe
    Ken Swofford
    Ken Swofford
    • Toby (technician)
    Frances Reid
    Frances Reid
    • Clara Dutton
    Richard Bull
    Richard Bull
    • Air Force Major
    • Director
      • Robert Wise
    • Writers
      • Michael Crichton
      • Nelson Gidding
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews269

    7.242.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8triplem33

    Shows its Age ??? What ???

    OK. I'm reading these reviews and I keep seeing the same things. Its shows its age. What ? That's like saying the aircraft in a WWII movie show their age. Of course it shows its age - this was the 1970s. Did you expect to see Pentium 4s with DVD Drives? If thats you main criticism then the movie must be good.

    It is good. Probably one of the most realistic and suspenseful movies of its kind ever made. Though PURSUIT was pretty good as well. Robert Wise does a very good job of building the story in a leisurely pace that keep you rivetted. I've seen the movie now about a dozen times and it still keeps me interested. Its not one of those movies where you can stop it and watch the remainder the next day. It has to watched in one sitting. I think the casting of ordinary Joes in the leads was very telling. This is a story about science not about characters.

    It will be interesting to see what they will do with the remake. Obviously the story is still relevant today - maybe even more so then in the late 60s.
    7lumper

    Fine slow moving sci-fi drama

    There's an echo of 2001 and a foreshadowing of The Parallax View in this paranoiac sci-fi drama. The movie delights in presenting the tools of science and questions the direction and authority of those elected or selected to preserve us. The pacing strikes modern audiences as slow - it is - but that's the film's greatest success: suspensefully unfolding at a snail's pace. Some of the dialog is stilted and some points are far too belabored (the scene where Dr. Mark Hall, James Olson, is instructed on the use of his key is a tedious overplaying of the moment). The cast do what they can with dialog that sounded a little trite and predictable in its day and sadly is the main thing that mars an otherwise hypnotic journey into the dangers of modern governments and modern science. At the film's core, however, is a lesson that bears repeating, lest we forget.
    9mstomaso

    Great hardcore sci-fi. Crichton's best

    The 1970s were a time before some of the "intelligentsia" of American culture began to abandon rationality and reject science on pseudo-ethical grounds. Unsurprisingly, then, 1970s sci-fi is often better informed by science than the sci-fi of later decades, and it is also often more thoughtful and intelligently written. The Andromeda Strain is one of the best hardcore sci fi epics from a decade which brought us such genre classics as 2001, Solyaris, Silent Running, and the original Rollerball. Unlike most of these films, however, Andromeda Strain does not strain believability beyond its bounds, nor does it indulge in metaphysical tangentializing or philosophical moralizing.

    Developed from what I consider to be Michael Crichton's best book, the Andromeda Strain takes its cue directly from the hard realism of that book, along with its documentary style and scientific background research. Though aspects of the plot defy biological probability, if not law, almost the entire film is plausible. Also borrowed from Crichton's writing is the general point the film attempts to make - one which is present in nearly all of Crichton's work - that along with technological advance comes risk. Fortunately, however, this story does not reach the near-paranoid levels of technophobia which sometimes appear in later works.

    A great ensemble cast full of not easily recognized character actors represent a team of scientists called together to contain and manage a deadly virus-like organism which has arrived on a crashed space research probe. The virus has already wiped out an entire town, and now the scientists must work at a breakneck, sleepless, pace to determine what the organism is, how it spreads and grows, and how it can be killed or contained. Their only major clues, it seems, are an old man and a baby who survived the initial outbreak. To avoid spoilers, I will avoid any further details regarding the plot.

    The only aspect of the film which really seems dated is the strange electronic soundtrack, which, at times, seems more derivative of 1950s sci-fi than more modern stuff. Suffice to say that this is one of the best uses of the 'as-it-happens' documentary film-making style. The entire film is delivered in a very refreshingly straightforward manner, with believable dialog, actors that look like real people, and a pace that builds constantly from start to finish.

    Highly recommended.
    7p-stepien

    Procedural sci-fi

    Within the logic confines of the Cold War and the eternal quest for the upper hand in annihilation, space becomes a frontier for seeking the next new biological weapon. When a US satellite crash-lands in a remote town of Piedmont in New Mexico a sudden outbreak of a cosmic threat causes almost the entire town to die in mid-step. The terrifying reality of an uncontrollable epidemic initiates a clandestine Wildfire project, where the finest scientific minds are whisked away to a secure underground facility with state of the art technology and a self-detonating nuclear device set to explode to prevent any potential outbreak. The project itself was formed by a group of prominent scientists led by Dr. Jeremy Stone (Arthur Hill) specifically for this eventuality: to counterattack any extraterrestial form of life, that could cause a deadly epidemic. Together with fellow scientists Charles Dutton (David Wayne), Ruth Leavitt (Kate Reid) and Mark Hall (James Olson) they descend into the facility, where they attempt to isolate the new life form and diagnose the two survivors of Piedmont: an crackpot drunkard and a helpless infant.

    Transcending into Robert Wise's feature is a prolonged pay-off, mostly focused on the procedural side of such a scenario, slowly building the story and only about midway do we finally get down to actually finding out what the titular Andromeda strain is, which in turn leads to an intense and riveting finale. Meanwhile however we snail downward the facility with five separate levels - each with scenes of progressive sterilisation. The journey to the heart of the facility, where the nitty gritty essence of the research starts, is essentially tedious, albeit serving its purpose of setting up the final act and acknowledging the relapsed tension that such an occurrence would create. Although the fate of the world being at hand, the road to salvation is slow, meticulous and affords no space for a misstep. Despite the slow unwinding there is also little in the way of character development, possibly only Kate Reid's cantankerous Ruth offering a stronger imprint on proceedings, which are otherwise dominated by the science and the crawling Armageddon.

    Midway the lethargic pacing stalled my interest, but once the story unfolds all the pieces fall into place delivering a high-tempo ending within this otherwise sedentary movie. Coupled with arguably the most exact scientific jargon in sci-fi features history and a overall believable background (despite some ridiculous mumbo-jumbo by one of the scientists about the possibility of microorganisms being sentient) delivers a sombre piece that can bore most, but will engage those who offer the movie their mind and body.
    7bkoganbing

    Life not as we know it

    Robert Wise made the daring decision not to cast any big name stars in The Andromeda Strain.. It certainly save on the budget. But it also lent a nice ring of authenticity.

    The story behind Michael Crichton's science fiction novel and the movie is that a small northern California town has been wiped out by a new strain of virus. The only survivor are a wino and an infant. Scooping them up four scientists Arthur Hill, James Olson, David Wayne, and Kate Reid take them to a secure location as they race against time to prevent a pandemic. This thing creeps up silently and moves fast.

    It's not like anything seen on earth. It's called The Andromeda Strain because that's the nearest galaxy to the one planet earth is in The Milky Way. The four have to race against time to come up with an answer.

    Robert Wise got a lot of tension out of this film, especially at the climax when it is race against time to prevent a self destruct from occuring just as are four are finding answers.

    They do find an answer. And ironically it's from some of the most plentiful things we have on planet earth is where the cure comes from.

    This one is a science fiction classic.

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    Related interests

    Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith in Men in Black (1997)
    Alien Invasion
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Special effects to create the germ from space cost $250,000.
    • Goofs
      Stone and Hall enter a one-story house, but inside find an elderly woman who committed suicide by hanging herself from a second-floor railing.
    • Quotes

      [finding a man dead by self-inflicted drowning in a bathtub]

      Dr. Jeremy Stone: I wouldn't believe you could commit suicide that way.

      Dr. Mark Hall: Most of them died instantly, but a few had time to go quietly nuts.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits read: "ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This film concerns the four-day history of a major American scientific crisis. We received the generous help of many people attached to Project Scoop at Vandenberg Air Force Base and the Wildfire Laboratory in Flatrock, Nevada. They encouraged us to tell the story accurately and in detail." "The documents presented here are soon to be made public. They do not in any way jeopardize the national security."
    • Alternate versions
      Italian version is 10 minutes shorter than original version (released at 130 min.) and omits many scenes from a subplot about a fallen fighter plane.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Six Million Dollar Man: Population: Zero (1974)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 12, 1971 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La amenaza de Andrómeda
    • Filming locations
      • Alamogordo, New Mexico, USA
    • Production company
      • Robert Wise Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $445
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 11m(131 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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