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Konrad

  • TV Movie
  • 1985
  • TV-G
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
256
YOUR RATING
Konrad (1985)
ComedyFamilyFantasySci-Fi

Konrad is a perfect instant child "born" in a factory at age 8. Due to a mistake in the factory's computer, Konrad is delivered to Bertie Bartolotti, a woman whose life and appearance are in... Read allKonrad is a perfect instant child "born" in a factory at age 8. Due to a mistake in the factory's computer, Konrad is delivered to Bertie Bartolotti, a woman whose life and appearance are in a constant state of disarray. Konrad arrives looking like a gremlin, but when Bertie pour... Read allKonrad is a perfect instant child "born" in a factory at age 8. Due to a mistake in the factory's computer, Konrad is delivered to Bertie Bartolotti, a woman whose life and appearance are in a constant state of disarray. Konrad arrives looking like a gremlin, but when Bertie pours a nutrient solution over his head he changes into a fully-developed, perfect 8-year-old ... Read all

  • Director
    • Nell Cox
  • Writers
    • Malcolm Marmorstein
    • Christine Nöstlinger
  • Stars
    • Max Wright
    • Polly Holliday
    • Huckleberry Fox
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    256
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nell Cox
    • Writers
      • Malcolm Marmorstein
      • Christine Nöstlinger
    • Stars
      • Max Wright
      • Polly Holliday
      • Huckleberry Fox
    • 9User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos3

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Max Wright
    Max Wright
    • Dr. Al Monford
    Polly Holliday
    Polly Holliday
    • Berti Bartolotti
    Huckleberry Fox
    Huckleberry Fox
    • Konrad
    Ned Beatty
    Ned Beatty
    • Mr. Thomas
    Virginya Keehne
    Virginya Keehne
    • Kitty
    • (as Virginia Keehne)
    Michael Ruud
    • Joe
    Nancy Borgenicht
    • Clerk
    Dan Rogers
    • Jim
    Jeff Olson
    • John
    Corliss Dale
    • Janine
    Scott Nemes
    • Frank
    Jeremy Haslam
    • Tony
    Craig Clyde
    Craig Clyde
    • Security Guard
    Dottie Brockbank
    • Cynthia
    Richard Mitchell
    • Roderick
    Dixie Jones
    • Factory Worker
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    • Director
      • Nell Cox
    • Writers
      • Malcolm Marmorstein
      • Christine Nöstlinger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.0256
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    Featured reviews

    7queenofhalves

    Endearing family science fiction

    I saw this film on PBS when I was a kid and it stuck in my memory, such that when I came across it in my local video store I rented it immediately. It's not in any sense a realistic story, and it's really ham-fisted with the moral, but I found it sweet and entertaining. Polly Holiday's performance as Konrad's hapless hippie mom is especially natural and memorable. Although it's definitely a kid's movie, I still find it to be more creative and amusing than the vast majority of children's television that's coming out today. Watch it with a child!
    7Atreyu_II

    Juvenile and childish but not without its charms

    In 1985 the charming child actor Huckleberry Fox starred in two TV movies: 'The Blue Yonder' and this. After 'Misunderstood' in the year before, Huckleberry Fox starred in another remake of an older film again with this one. This one is the remake of a German 1983 movie titled 'Konrad oder Das Kind aus der Konservenbüchse'. I never saw that one but I can predict it as the better version.

    'Konrad' is a quite juvenile 80's movie. It's not a great movie and certainly not "realistic", but there are elements of sweetness in it such as: Konrad coming out of a can so smiling and radiant, the immediate chemistry that develops between him and his "adoptive parents", Konrad's "perfection" (so much that he feels sad and guilty if he commits any mistake at all), the fight of the "adoptive parents" to bring him back home sweet home.

    I found elements in common with 'D.A.R.Y.L.' (also from 1985): both are about a perfect robot-child who are so human-like in looks and personality and find a loving family and are brought back to their respective manufacturing places and face the challenge of escaping and returning to their beloved family.

    Konrad was never meant to be delivered to Berti, but it is this mistake that brings new joy of life to this old woman.

    Ned Beatty is great as Mr. Thomas, but Polly Holliday and cute as a button Huckleberry Fox are excellent as Berti and Konrad, respectively.
    5okpilak

    A certain sweetness

    A film for the whole family, and almost fits in with the Alf film era, of which Max Wright was prominent in his role. By mistake, an instant child is delivered to the wrong woman. She activates him, and falls in love with him, and he, of course, was programmed to love her. And Konrad was programmed for perfection. And he does not understand that others make mistakes. But the bottom line is that humans are not robots, and the factory was creating robots that are programmed to be human. There is sort of a gentleness to the movie but it is not a great movie, and it fits in well for when it was made. Of course, when the factory discovers the mistake, they seek to recover Konrad, as he remains their property forever. It has the look of being done very cheaply, but that also may be for when it was made. Futuristic factories were just wild guesses as to appearance then. The casting of the main characters fits well with the story.
    9srmccarthy

    VERY GOOD MOVIE!!

    If your family is old fashioned & likes ENTERTAINMENT, this is a very good movie for a family to watch! What I mean is that there is NO "Blood and guts", Just clean FUN!

    Konrad (Huckleberry Fox) a brand new 8 yeard old boy, fresh out of a can, PERFECT IN EVERY WAY, and supposed to remain as such. However, he is accidentally delivered to Bertie (Polly Holliday), who is far from "perfect". Together with Mr. Thomas (Ned Beatty), and a few unexpected friends, they fight for Konrad's right to be normal!!!!!
    5rivercityrandom

    This is a mission for the not-nice team!

    Meet Konrad, a loveable little boy played by adorably-named Huckleberry Fox. He's a genetically-engineered "Instant Child", mass-produced in a factory, brainwashed by oppressive "trainers" to become docile, loyal, and respectful to elders, then vacuum-sealed in a pop-top can for ease of storage and delivery. So what happens when eccentric rug-maker Berti Bartelotti (Polly Holiday) gets him by mistake? Report such flagrant human-rights violations to Amnesty International? Bring this fiasco to the attention of the paranoid media? Oh no, of course not. Won over by his ingrained cuteness, she keeps little Konrad as her very own, while she and her boyfriend, known only as "Mr. Thomas" (Ned Beatty), haggle over the right to dote upon him like he was some sort of toy they were sharing. Meanwhile, the factory owner, Dr. Monford (played by Max Wright of ALF fame), is upset that Konrad got accidentally placed in an unfit environment (since Berti and Mr. Thomas are [gasp!] living in sin) and sends his elite cadre of bumbling security guards to "recall" and "recycle" their perfect child. This child is indeed so perfect that he has grand mal seizures of anxiety whenever he makes the smallest mistake and is regularly pantsed around the playground by bullies with no special programming. The hilarity ensues as our heroes track down the kidnapped Konrad to the "factory", a dystopian monochromatic "1984 Elementary School" where perfect Aryan children march double-file down the halls, and a loudspeaker announces, to the shock of all kids watching, that "Halloween has been cancelled." Needless to say, after the spell-binding thrill-a-minute climax, everyone goes away happy and realizes that it's okay to be less-than-perfect even if you are a dysfunctional abused clone. Fairly good production values and quirky acting make this PBS/Wonderworks special a great family movie. Or is it?

    This was one of my favorite movies growing up when I thought it was far more chilling and dystopian than it really was. The scene with Konrad lying desiccated in the can after being opened haunts me 17 years later. However, coming back to it as an adult, I realize just how juvenile the premise really is. In this story, cloning isn't morally wrong, nor is eugenics, child abuse, imprisonment, cryogenics without consent or slavery. Konrad is not a human being, he's "another one of those fads of yours" and "a miracle of genetic engineering," as Mr. Thomas states. And how are these children constructed? Are they normal, yet enhanced human beings (like Star Trek's Khan) or are they designed to stay adorable 8-year-olds forever, their growth forever stunted like that of toy dogs? In that case, Dr. Monford is right in recalling Konrad from his chaotic surroundings. A child like him would be unable to function in the outside world and be subject to countless health problems, just like a toy poodle or a Shar-Pei. He would be so dependent on his controlled lifestyle that he would need a home where he and his environment could be constantly monitored. To be such a being, a living plaything at the disposal of the decadent elite, would be very depressing indeed. But yet the factory children wave their dimpled smiles as millions of normal babies are born and die waiting to be adopted. Indeed this is a great movie for children... if you want to teach them that their worth as a human being is calculated only by their value in the consumer marketplace. If you want to watch this movie done right, watch Little Man Tate, Gattaca, Star Trek II, or A.I. Oh heck, you can even watch Parts: The Clonus Horror.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Drew Barrymore and Pat Welsh in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
    Family
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Berti calls Konrad a gremlin Polly Holliday who plays Berti was in the movie Gremlins
    • Quotes

      Mr. Thomas: I'm his semi-foster-adoptive-part father.

      Berti Bartolotti: And I'm his official mother... it says so on his phony birth certificate.

    • Connections
      Remake of Conrad: The Factory-Made Boy (1983)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 13, 1985 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wonderworks: Konrad
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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