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
The most brilliant TV series ever made
This was the most clever, prescient, witty, well produced, and subversive TV series ever created. I saw some of the shows, but then was expeditioning and missed many. MAX HEADROOM (the 85-86 TV series- I'm not familiar with the other permutations)was brilliant on 5 levels at once, like old Firesign Theatre skits, where one can watch again and again and see different levels each time. The money and production values were unprecedented (now each ER costs $14mil, God nows what Friends runs) in it's sly depiction of a media controlled hilarious nightmare world. Gonzo droll Matt Frewer did bang-up work as both a real TV reporter, controlled by the lush Amanda Pays via continuous links, and the sly double-entendreing computer generated Max. This was a searing critique of media run amok- everything was some brilliant trashing of some current or future trend (with Fear Factor losing me forever at the bull penis eating portion, they were prophetic). It saddens me that Frewer is trapped in lame para-psychological claptrap when he was so good in this unknown gem. Mike Hammerschlag
Ahead of Its Time, Natch
The series didn't last nearly long enough for me; the original title, "Twenty Minutes Into the Future" is very accurate-- technologically, stylistically, and in terms of content and post-production, "Max Headroom" was ahead of its time. It was a mid-season replacement and never found its audience; the database lists the tv-movie, the series (14 or 15 eps), and the original talk show which started the whole thing. I'm still amazed at the wisdom (or lack thereof) of television execs who can cancel a series halfway through a season. Then again, "Max Headroom" was about television, making some eerily accurate predictions (CNN, tabloid talk shows), and television execs are nothing if not chickens.
Still, it would be too, too cool to see Max pop up to comment about the millennium...
The Granddaddy of Post-Apocalyptic TV
"Max Headroom" was the first cyberpunk, post-apocalyptic TV show EVER (way back in 1987).
Max was decades ahead of its time. The show predicted such things as identity theft, the Internet, the webcam, and the fusion of media and government. (One episode even mourned the closure of movie theaters. Today, thanks to Netflix and video-on-demand, that has now come to pass.)
In a word, Max was prophetic. The hip, trendy post-apocalyptic shows that you're seeing today owe a great debt to Max Headroom.
The "future" of media that has now become real
While the ABC version was a good copy, like any copy, it just wasn't the same. The UK film, talk show, and ABC version spawned Max as a celebrity. He was everywhere including being a pitchman for Coke.
If you want the best "Max Headroom" experience, see the 1985 UK film. But if they ever broadcast the ABC series, see it.
What is ironic is that the motivation for the evil deeds of the corporate owners of Network 23 is what did in this series. It was put up against ratings giants "Dallas" and "Miami Vice" and canceled midway through their only season.
Max Headroom..
Did you know
- TriviaAfter the show was initially canceled in the second season (after drawing minimal ratings after being moved to Friday nights, against Dallas (1978) and Miami Vice (1984)), Max Headroom made a final announcement, paraphrasing (and imitating) Winston Churchill: "We will fight them on the streets of Dallas... We will fight them on the streets of Miami... Vice... and if the ratings book lasts for a thousand years, they will say this is Max Headroom's finest hour."
- 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








