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The Brain Machine

  • 1972
  • PG-13
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
3.1/10
576
YOUR RATING
The Brain Machine (1972)
Sci-FiThriller

Several people volunteer for a scientific experiment about mind-reading and memory, but the experiment goes horribly wrong.Several people volunteer for a scientific experiment about mind-reading and memory, but the experiment goes horribly wrong.Several people volunteer for a scientific experiment about mind-reading and memory, but the experiment goes horribly wrong.

  • Director
    • Joy N. Houck Jr.
  • Writers
    • Thomas Hal Phillips
    • Christian Garrison
    • Joy N. Houck Jr.
  • Stars
    • James Best
    • Barbara Burgess
    • Gil Peterson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.1/10
    576
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joy N. Houck Jr.
    • Writers
      • Thomas Hal Phillips
      • Christian Garrison
      • Joy N. Houck Jr.
    • Stars
      • James Best
      • Barbara Burgess
      • Gil Peterson
    • 34User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    James Best
    James Best
    • Rev. Emory Neill
    Barbara Burgess
    • Dr. Carol Portland
    Gil Peterson
    Gil Peterson
    • Dr. Elton Morris
    Gerald McRaney
    Gerald McRaney
    • Willie West
    Marcus J. Grapes
    • Judd Reeves
    Doug Collins
    • Dr. Roland Roth
    Ann Latham
    Ann Latham
    • Minnie Lee Parks
    • (as Anne Latham)
    Thomas Hal Phillips
    • The General
    • (as Thomas Phillips)
    Christian Garrison
    • Garrison
    Stocker Fontelieu
    • Saxon
    Tom Dever
    Tom Dever
    • Bodyguard
    Stuart Lancaster
    Stuart Lancaster
    • Senator
    Zephirin Hymel IV
    • Dr. Krisner
    • (as Zephirin Hymel)
    Sam Sherrill
    • A Guard
    Stephen C. Burnham
    • Williams
    Ky Oaks
    • A Woman
    James T. Morris
    • Chief Technician
    Charles Hornsby
    • Second Technician
    • (as Charles Hornby)
    • Director
      • Joy N. Houck Jr.
    • Writers
      • Thomas Hal Phillips
      • Christian Garrison
      • Joy N. Houck Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    3.1576
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    Featured reviews

    5Red-Barracuda

    Confusing and messy but I kind of like it

    While I watched The Brain Machine I thought I must be kind of dumb because I had to keep on rewinding it in order to follow what was going on. I thought it was pretty bad that I was having so much bother understanding an exploitation flick. But subsequently, I have read other reviews and discovered that thankfully I was not alone and it seems to be generally felt that this is one confusing sci-fi thriller. It's about a secret government sponsored experiment where four volunteers are put through a series of tests that cause them to relive dark psychological events from their past including murder and war flash-backs. That makes it sound relatively straightforward but boy it sure isn't. It's edited together in such a way that it's difficult following not only what is going on but also who is who. While it's never in the least bit obvious what the point of the experiment actually is in the first place. The Brain Machine itself is sort of vaguely defined, although lawn chairs with sensors do seem to be an important component of it. There is also a room in which the test subjects are located in which the walls shrink in, which is a way of testing the psychological consequences of overpopulation! It's so random and strange. We have good people and bad people but it's not always even obvious what their motivations are, so character actions are also somewhat eccentric to say the least.

    But despite being very low budget and shoddily made, there is something consistently interesting about this film nevertheless. It's kind of endearing that a film with so little money and made for an exploitation audience is so ambitious. While it may not achieve its goals exactly, it falls short in an entertaining and intriguing enough manner. Its very incomprehensibility actually probably does it some favours too, in that you can watch this again and discover new aspects. Like a lot of 70's movies it has a paranoid thriller element, where the government are up to no good. The mixture of conspiracy film intrigue with science fiction works pretty well. It stars a couple of notable people with James 'The Dukes of Hazzard' Best a pervy priest and Stuart 'Russ Meyer' Lancaster as the Senator. I got to say I liked this one's clunky charm and while the story-line is messy, it was at least a little bit different. And that counts for quite a lot.
    5talisencrw

    A mind control/paranoia conspiracy theory 70's B-movie definitely worth a watch!

    This is a low-budget 70's film which stems from the cinematic crazes of both the 'evilly-implemented mind control' ('The Manchurian Candidate' and 'The Ipcress File') and 'paranoia about government conspiracy' sub-genres that were fervently expressed in the Vietnam/Watergate era of American cinema. For me, growing up watching James Best as Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane in 'The Dukes of Hazzard', it was intriguing to watch him here, as a priest selected as one of 4 paid volunteers for an experiment supposedly run by the ECC, an environmental organization. It ends up that it's just a cover to test an experimental mind-control 'Brain Machine' that the U.S. government wants, in order to keep it's citizens in line, in the name of 'keeping social order'. Admittedly, when one of the directors says that the future is surveillance, I couldn't help but shudder at the parallels to society today, in this post-9/11 era. Unfortunately, the more time that passes, the closer these Orwellian cinematic views of civilization and its discontents come to mirroring the way life has become.

    No spoilers, but the machine forces the person to tell the truth. Growing up, I have learned that honesty is not always the best policy. In fact, life has to endure the 'little white lie' in order to have things run peacefully. While no cinematic masterwork, this film more than suffices as Exhibit A for evidence. Definitely worth a watch, especially if you can handle 1970's, TV-movie-style filmmaking.
    WritnGuy-2

    Painfully Boring...

    I rented this as part of a weekly movie night with a friend of mine. We got this, "The Supernaturals," and "Blood Splash," also known as "Nightmare" or "Nightmare in a Damaged Brain." This was the worst of the three.

    We got this under the name "Mind Warp," and decided to get it only because it looked like it could be okay. (Well, why else would we rent it?!) The story is pretty basic. Two doctors stick four people in an underground lab and start doing mental tests on them with these Star Trek computers. (Spare the constant "beep-beep...beep-beep" from the TV show.)

    Nothing really happens. The film's first twenty minutes is about an escapee from the lab who has a file showing all that goes on. Apparently, these tests are pretty much illegal. He eventually gets caught and killed off. Then the four people (a war veteran, a priest, a girl, and some other guy) are tested on. It's all really boring until finally they all start going mad and either killing themselves, or each other, until the abrupt and pretty unsatisfying ending.

    I say...avoid this. Really. It isn't very good at all. I found it in the horror section, and hopefully if you do, too, you will just pass it by. It has nothing to offer.
    3Coventry

    Rage against the Brain Machine...

    Ouch, what a painfully BORING Sci-Fi movie! And that's especially saddening because the opening 15 minutes were so action-packed and full of potential! During the intro, we follow a bunch of nervous security officers and hired hit men as they chase a doctor who escaped from a mysterious laboratory with a briefcase full of top-secret files. As he's about to reveal the supposedly horrible & inhuman events that take place in the lab, he's executed. Figures… From then on, the 'action' swifts back and forth between two locations, the aforementioned laboratory and the rural mansion of a corrupt senator (or something), and it quickly becomes clear that the experiments are actually the complete opposite of disturbing. More like dull, pointless and vague. Scientists selected four random persons without living relatives and it's really really really really important that they speak the truth even though a giant machine reads the content of their minds, anyway. They all hide dark secrets from their pasts and people suffer when get revealed; yet I fail to see how these tests could ever result in a humanity-threatening device. Perhaps I missed something, but I doubt it. The interactions between the patients and doctors are even less interesting to follow, as really none of them have personalities. So basically, "The Brain Machine" just handles about a bunch of lame people living in an awfully decorated room. The film also could have been half an hour shorter if it weren't for a THOUSAND stagnant shots of buildings! The relocations from the lab to the villa and vice versa are indicated EVERY SINGLE TIME by a five-second shot of the places. Either the makers really needed the padding or they just assumed that all Sci-Fi viewers are morons unable to notice a change of location by themselves. Staring at a forsaken pool with a mansion in the background for the tenth time in only five minutes becomes quite annoying, I assure you. James Best's performance as the reverend with mental issues is rather decent, but one man definitely can't save this thing from being an absolute waste of time. Avoid!
    joeblev

    Sheriff Rosco as you've NEVER seen him before!

    James Best (Rosco From "Dukes of Hazzard") plays an emotionally tortured clergyman who volunteers for a secretive government experiment in this tepid, badly-edited thriller. The other participants in the experiment are: a fat slob, a hillbilly woman, and a wimpy guy played by Gerald McRaney. They seem like normal (if annoying) folks at first, but they all have terrible secrets in their past. The government wants to put these people in something called the "E-Box," which looks like a big cubicle filled with lawn furniture. While inside, their darkest, most embarrassing memories are dredged up for the world to see. Of course, the experiment goes horribly, horribly wrong, and there's a lot of pain, suffering, and death in the last half hour of the movie. The rest is just a rather confusing series of scenes showing big office buildings and people in lab coats. There are about 372 shots of a swimming pool for some reason. If you love establishing shots, THIS IS THE MOVIE FOR YOU. They establish the HELL out of these scenes. The exact point of the experiment remains a mystery to me. Surely, there are cheaper and more efficient ways for the goverment to make people feel bad about themselves. So in summary, "The Brain Machine" -- rent it, won't you?

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    Related interests

    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The eerie pulsating sound heard at around 45 minutes is the same as the sound heard in the derelict space station in Lost In Space.
    • Goofs
      In the first scene at the lab, when Dr. Krisner is escaping with the files, he stops briefly in the doorway where other staff are sitting. He has a large and obvious moustache. He then runs out of the building with the files, and by the time he reaches a tree several hundred yards from the building, he is clean-shaven. The man with the moustache is a different person playing the part.
    • Quotes

      T.V. Announcer: This just in! The National Environmental Control Center reports that Dr. Roland, authority on the human brain, was electrocuted along with six others when a patient broke from a experimental therapy area, ripped through a protected panel and exposed himself and the other victims to 500,000 volts of electricity! Along with Dr. Roth; the dead include his two assistants, Dr. Carol Portland, Dr. Elton Morris, three other patients, and Willard West. A patient who apparently went berserk during a routine experiment, shouting; "I can't die, I'm immortal! I am god!" This is Cornell Wood. That's tonights late news! Good night!

    • Connections
      Referenced in DVD/Lazerdisc/VHS collection 2016 (2016)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1972 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gray Matter
    • Filming locations
      • Mississippi, USA
    • Production companies
      • Howco Productions Inc.
      • Power and Communications
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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