Max Headroom
- TV Series
- 1987–1988
- 1h
In the near future, an intrepid investigative TV reporter does his job with help from his colleagues--and a computerized version of himself.In the near future, an intrepid investigative TV reporter does his job with help from his colleagues--and a computerized version of himself.In the near future, an intrepid investigative TV reporter does his job with help from his colleagues--and a computerized version of himself.
- Won 3 Primetime Emmys
- 4 wins & 2 nominations total
Featured reviews
Blank Reg (a blank is a person who has been removed from the corporate system, they have few rights, but the 'powers that be' can't easily find them) is put on trial for hacking (a major crime). The court is a gameshow with gameshow host for a judge and an opinion poll for a jury. I am glad to see how far off this is from reality - sarcasm :(
Another episode involved a sport called rake-boarding, where skateboarders would attempt to disembowel each other while performing nifty stunts. Thank god mass media has not opted for gladiatorial shows...
My question was never why this show got cancelled, but who the hell got the idea to put it on the air in the first place. I mean, this was a show whose primary entertainment value was in skewering the very medium which presented it. I can't believe that the mucky-mucks even allowed this to be seen, nevertheless broadcast.
Each show was intelligent, witty and eerily prescient. I suppose the final irony was that the show itself was cancelled, but the problems that it warned us about have come true. If you get the chance to see the extant shows, see them. They are among the only truly visionary and artistic and entertaining things to have been on stupid-box since its inception.
It's a real 80's punk culture film. It's very dark, depressing, and for some reason a lot of it seems to take place at night or in the dark. Max lightens the mood with funny quips and puns.
Watch out for George Rossi, DC Lennox from The Bill, who plays Mahler.
Max Headroom was brilliant. One of the most spot-on and funny pieces of satire ever produced. The fact that it was satirizing the very medium that produced it probably had something to do with its short life, as well. I mean, when you're satirizing stupidity, obviously stupidity is going to react, just by definition.
Any TV producers out there reading this -- there's an idea for you. Create an "Intelligent TV Channel", and give us shows like this, or Key West, Brimstone, Cupid, etc. You could even call it that, as a dig at the mindless drivel that pours off the screen most of the time.
but boy, we never saw it again (not a single video-store holds this) and we were quite nervous when the remake (tv series) was announced ... what a disappointment! with their cold blooded commerciality they made a perfectly clean familiy movie out of the bleak retro ambiance of the original 57 min trip. worst, these are the versions the video-stores are filing.
Did you know
- TriviaThe futuristic graphics used on the show were created by a top-of-the-line computer of 1987, a Commodore Amiga.
- Quotes
Max Headroom: Now, I'm no librarian, in fact, I don't know what star sign I am. But, as a famous person once said, "You can fool some of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time." And as I - another more famous person - once said, "If you don't teach them to read, you can fool them whenever you like."
- Alternate versionsThe first episode is a remake of the British film Max Headroom (1985) (TV).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Back to the Future Part II (1989)
- How many seasons does Max Headroom have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Max Headroom: 20 Minutes Into the Future
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1