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DVD Review : Genesis II and Planet Earth

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By GustavoLeao / 07:25, 24 October 2009 / General Genre/SciFi

THE WARNER ARCHIVE COLLECTION: GENESIS II (1973) / PLANET EARTH (1974)


Released by Warner Home Entertainment


Reviewed for TrekWeb.com by Bill Williams

  

GENESIS II (1973)

1 disc / Running time: 74 minutes

MSRP $19.95

ISBN # 883316203392

Date of release: September 22, 2009

 

PLANET EARTH (1974)

1 disc / Running time: 74 minutes

MSRP $19.95

ISBN # 883316204078

Date of release: September 22, 2009

 

In the 1970's there was a time where there was no STAR TREK beyond reruns of the series and a collection of animated episodes. Novels and comics sporadically appeared, and the first fan conventions had just begun to occur. There were also rumblings of bringing STAR TREK back either as a feature film or a second television series. Still, Gene Roddenberry had other ideas in mind, other concepts he wanted to explore both in film and on television.

 

One of Roddenberry's first post-TREK projects he came up with was GENESIS II, which explored the human condition on Earth in the not-too-distant future. Written and produced by Roddenberry, and directed by John Llewellyn Moxey, GENESIS II follows the story of Dylan Hunt (played here by Alex Cord), a NASA research scientist who volunteers in 1979 to undergo an experimental procedure of suspended animation that, if successful, would allow astronauts to endure long trips in space without dealing with the aging process. After an unfortunate cave-in, miners find Hunt still alive after 154 years and return him to life. As Hunt adjusts to living on a transformed Earth, he discovers himself in the middle of a conflict between the peace-loving citizens of Pax and the militaristic Tyranians, the latter of whom is led by an attractive, duplicitous mutant (Mariette Hartley) with two hearts (and two navels!), both of which are ice cold - and Hunt must uncover the secret plot at heart.

 

GENESIS II has a number of lofty ideas that Roddenberry attempts to present within the 74-minute movie, among them the then-near future of Earth in 1979, peace at all costs, war, reverse sexuality where women dominate and men are the slaves, torture devices called stims (which apparently mirror our own modern-day drug stimulants), and nuclear technology gone awry. In bringing this story to life, Roddenberry relied on a number of well-known actors from TREK to flesh out key supporting roles - including Hartley, Ted Cassidy (Ruk from "What are Little Girls Made Of?"), Percy Rodriguez (Commodore Stone from "Court Martial"), and even Majel Barrett Roddenberry. As Dylan Hunt, Alex Cord brings an understated performance to his character, attempting to adjust to his new surroundings while attempting to uncover what's happening within the Tyranian realm. He does fairly well with the material he's given, but in my mind he just isn't believable in the lead role.

 

When GENESIS II failed to sell, Roddenberry tried again, revisiting his concept and renaming it PLANET EARTH. Produced in 1974 by Robert Justman, written by Roddenberry and Juanita Bartlett, and directed by veteran TREK director Marc Daniels, PLANET EARTH finds Dylan Hunt (now played by John Saxon) leading a Pax science team against a team of Confederacy marauders who attack Hunt's team for some unknown purpose. As Hunt and his team investigates the mystery, it takes them to an Amazon-like society where women rule, and where its leader (Diana Muldaur) wants Hunt - but for what purpose?

 

I have to admit, while still cheesy PLANET EARTH plays much stronger than its predecessor. Saxon is much more believable than Alex Cord, possessing a more natural leadership quality in the role. Roddenberry integrates numerous concepts, including the religious and the psychic (both of which would play integral parts in later TREK series), palm-sized computers (which are not too far separated from our PDAs and iPhones), a reverse take on women's liberation and male enslavement (later revisited in the NEXT GENERATION episode "Angel One"), slave auctions, and more. While Roddenberry and Bartlett have a number of good concepts in hand, it still cannot dismiss the fact that there's a cheesiness about it. As with GENESIS II, PLANET EARTH also failed to sell. Roddenberry would visit the concept once more, under the title STRANGE NEW WORLD - but in this case, as in baseball, three strikes and he's out.

 

Now, both pilots have been recently released for the first time on DVD from Warner Home Video as part of its Archive Collection of memorable movies and television series. Both GENESIS II and PLANET EARTH have been released in single-disc volumes, struck from the master print negatives and presented in their original 1.37:1 broadcast aspect ratio and Dolby 2.0 sound. Each pilot is divided into chapters that occur every ten minutes, similar to what is utilized on DVD+R recorders. Colors are rich, and the attention to detail is very good for both releases. There are no other features on either disc - no bonus features, no audio commentary, no subtitles.

 

Having GENESIS II and PLANET EARTH on DVD for the first time is quite interesting, because we get to see more of Gene Roddenberry's thoughts on mankind in the future. And if the Dylan Hunt character sounds familiar to all of you ANDROMEDA fans, it should! I only hope that Warner Home Video gets a chance to release more of Roddenberry's pilots and forgotten TV work on DVD down the road, among them STRANGE NEW WORLD, POLICE STORY, THE LONG HUNT OF APRIL SAVAGE, and THE QUESTOR TAPES.



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SPECTRE !!! | Report this post to moderator
By: GustavoLeao (Odo's file, contact, web site) @ 08:43:32 on Oct 24, 2009

Lets not forget SPECTRE, Bill - possibly the best TV Pilot from Gene in the 1970s, which highly influenced THE X-FILES.

This one is a must on DVD for Roddenberry and horror fans.

Gustavo

--------

TrekWeb.com Supervising Editor

gl2000@uol.com.br


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Cover | Report this post to moderator
By: hawke5150 (Odo's file, contact) @ 07:51:21 on Oct 24, 2009

This is the second time I've seen the cover work for G-II and for the life of me, I still don't get it AT ALL.

Maybe somebody can let me in on it?

How about Cord or at least a pic of the cool shuttle, or Hartley and her twin belly buttons or ANYTHING relevent to the film besides two gals from the Isle of Lesbos or wherever the hell it is that Wonder Woman comes from...

Peace,
hawke


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