Still image from the 1973 film Westworld.

Westworld

Directed by Michael Crichton

A future fantasy park turns deadly when robot workers go on a killing spree.

1973 1h 31m Horror/Science-Fiction TV-MA

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CAST
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Michael Crichton, Director
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Michael Crichton
Director

1

Richard Benjamin,
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Richard Benjamin

2

Yul Brynner,
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Yul Brynner

3

James Brolin,
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James Brolin

4

Michael Mikler,
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Michael Mikler

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Nora Marlowe,
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Nora Marlowe

FULL SYNOPSIS

A high-tech amusement park for adults features three recreated historical environments - Medieval World, Roman World and West World - populated by highly realistic androids programmed to indulge the whims of every high-paying guest. The main attraction of West World is the Gunslinger - a robot programmed to start duels but who can always be "killed" by humans packing special guns. John and Peter, two buddies on vacation, wake up in a West World bordello after a night of brawls and booze, not yet knowing that a system-wide failure has infected the androids and placed them in mortal danger.


VIDEOS
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Ben Mankiewicz Intro...
Hosted Intro
Orientation
Movie Clip
Disease Of Machinery...
Movie Clip
Original Trailer
Trailer
Sloppy With Your Drink...
Movie Clip
I'm Shot!
Movie Clip

ARTICLES
Imagine a Disneyland for adults where every man and woman can live out their fantasies. That's what science fiction writer Michael Crichton did when he wrote the screenplay for Westworld (1973), a film that holds the distinction of being the last movie MGM produced before dissolving its releasing company. Westworld is also notable as the first theatrical feature directed by Crichton (He previously directed two television movies, Binary (1972), under the pseudonym John Lange, and Pursuit (1972) starring Ben Gazzara). In an interview with Michael Crichton in American Cinematography, he discussed what inspired him to make Westworld: "I'd visited Kennedy Space Center and seen how astronauts were being trained - and I realized that they were really machines. Those guys were working very hard to make their responses, and even their heartbeats, as machine-like and predictable as possible. At the other extreme, one can go to Disneyland and see Abraham Lincoln standing up every 15 minutes to deliver the Gettysburg Address. That's the case of a machine that has been made to look, talk and act like a person. I think it was that sort of a notion that got the picture started. It was the idea of playing with a situation in which the usual distinctions between person and machine - between a car and the driver of the car - become blurred, and then trying to see if there was something in the situation that would lead to other ways of looking at what's human and what's mechanical." For those...

ARCHIVES
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 Movie Poster Art from the movie 'Westworld'
Westworld
Movie Poster Art

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