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The Illustrated Man

1969

Action / Drama / Fantasy / Horror / Sci-Fi

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Rod Steiger Photo
Rod Steiger as Carl
Claire Bloom Photo
Claire Bloom as Felicia
Robert Drivas Photo
Robert Drivas as Willie
Don Dubbins Photo
Don Dubbins as Pickard
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
944.77 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 0 / 2
1.71 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 1 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Muldwych7 / 10

Dated, but the core still shines bright.

'The Illustrated Man' shows how good a writer Ray Bradbury was, not to mention how his head was full of fascinating ideas. It shows this because the film is incredibly dated today, from the acting styles to the visions of the future we witness. And yet I remained engrossed throughout, because beneath the anachronisms and barmy notions lie the same powerful film that resonated with me as a child.

A lot of the film has little to do with the title character, although Rod Steiger's menacing performance will never let you forget the man with all-over body tattoos that come to life if you stare too hard. Also, Steiger himself has multiple roles throughout, and he delivers them with a mix of the theatrical bellow and long-faced stoicism of the period, but they still have their impact. Meanwhile of greater interest are the short stories each tattoo reveals. Like Bradbury's 'The Martian Chronicles', this film is a collection of tales woven around a central premise. We view his fears about where human society is heading, thanks to the all-pervading intrusion of technology into our lives.

I'm reminded of a Poe line - "without music or an intriguing idea, colour becomes pallor, man becomes carcass, home becomes catacomb, and the dead are but for a moment motionless". What becomes of the human soul when the machines take over? Add the all-embracing pallor and single-chrome fashion of a typical 1960s vision of the future, and you have a very bleak picture indeed. Yet that's how people saw things then (our guesses on things to come will look just as ridiculous soon enough),and the central theme, given how far we've progressed technologically in the interim, cannot be any less relevant. I'm glad our modern perspective yearns for more colour though - never mind technology killing our souls - the achromatic architecture would make anyone suicidal enough already.

Sojourns into futurity do of course suggest sci-fi trappings. Even putting aside the fact that predictions of the future quickly become dated, Ray Bradbury was never scientifically accurate at the time he wrote his stories. In 'The Martian Chronicles' for example, it is possible to breathe on Mars, water flows through canals, and a few blasts from a rocket's engines can terraform the atmosphere. 'The Illustrated Man' takes the same liberties with reality. Yet to dismiss it because of nonsensical scientific premises is to miss the point. The settings are not more than fabulous window dressing - fantasy masquerading as sci-fi. It is the exploration of the human condition in each tale that Bradbury is concerned with, and they are timeless.

As such, while time has not been entirely kind to this screen adaption of 'The Illustrated Man', its emotional core remains intact. The Bradbury flair for the weird and the wonderful is untarnished, and his thoughts still clear. You just need to take a good long look at a rainbow afterwards.

Reviewed by BandSAboutMovies3 / 10

Tattooed man

Beyond Bird with the Crystal Plumage, there's one movie my mother has already brought up that she hated. And that would be this one.

The book that these stories come from has eighteen of them, but Howard B. Kreitsek and Jack Smight picked these three for the film without ever speaking to that book's author, Ray Bradbury. The tattooed man who appears in the book's prologue and epilogue would become this film's main story and be played by Rod Steiger.

The funny thing is that when Steiger takes off his glove to reveal his entire hand is tattooed, it's played off as a horrific moment. A half century after this movie was made and nearly every one of my friends has this many tattoos.

Carl the tattooed man meets Willie and uses his skin illustrations to show tales throughout time. The ink came from a mysterious woman named Felicia and at the end of the film, Willie sees his death at the hands of Carl in the only bare patch of skin on the Illustrated Man.

The stories that are told include "The Veldt," which takes place in the future and has children who study within a virtual version of the African veldt. Soon, the lions will solve this issue of their parents. "The Long Rain" has solar rains* that drive an entire crew to madness in space. And "The Last Night of the World" predates The Mist with parents that must decide if their children should survive the end of the world.

The final story - and its bleak ending - is exactly why my mom hates this movie. The fact that she may have told me all about it when I was a kid may have given me nightmares.

This movie didn't do well critically or financially. Rod Serling, who would be the expert on adapting short stories to film called it the worst movie ever made.

*Their spaceship is recycled from Planet of the Apes, Beneath the Planet of the Apes and Escape from the Planet of the Apes.

Reviewed by moonspinner553 / 10

Overwrought

Past-present-future collage adapted from Ray Bradbury's collection of stories centering on tattooed man's vendetta against the woman who covered his body with permanent artwork. Highly uneven and cold film, ultimately unsatisfying. Despite Rod Steiger's apparent lust for the ladies, there's an odd undercurrent of homo-eroticism running throughout (at one point, he grabs a young man and pulls him up off the ground, and it's a bit like a scene out of Steiger's "The Sergeant"). The picture isn't even well-made, with odd locations that don't help us to get our bearings and brackish cinematography. *1/2 from ****

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