I actually think the ending chase is the best part. It's so stark and quiet. The style of that sequence had a massive influence on what I find aesthetically pleasing, along with Pee-Wee's Big Adventure and Flight of the Navigator.
I had a TV in my room when I was 13 and I couldn't sleep one summer night, so I turned on the TV at 2 am, and Westworld was starting. I watched it start to finish and it was the greatest movie I had ever seen at the time.
A nice touch to the movie was having Yul Brynner''s wardrobe mirror that of his character in magnificent seven. It adds an extra layer of "this can't be real" to the movie.
Westworld is a favorite. I didn't get to see it until it came to TV. My sister saw it at the theater and I remember her coming home and talking about it. Some years later I caught it when it came to Saturday night at the movies and absolutely loved it. One night while driving home, these guys on talk radio mentioned that Yul Brynner was the 1st Terminator.
Always loved this flick. Great idea and enjoyable. The sound of Yul Bryners boots clicking on the ground will forever be associated for me with impending menace. Way more fun than the show...which just disappeared up its own arse.
The ending chase always reminds me of Terminator, right down to the scene of Brenner walking down the hallway with the interspersed lights over head. There’s a similar scene in the factory in Terminator as the robot walks down the hallway in the factory. Also, like in west world, the robot is hard to kill. Thinking about it… I feel west world was a larger influence on Terminator then I even realized.
One thing I have a question about. Brolin's character stated that in Westworld the guns have sensors which prevent you from shooting a human. However, how in Medieval World or Roman World do you prevent a guest from stabbing another guest with a sword?
Blunt edges, but when they become sentient, given their physical superiority the robots might slice a human with a pipe. On the reverse, robots could "act" being cut by a blunt weapon accordingly.
Apparently not. The movie had a lot of flaws like that, but I grew up with it shown on TV chopped up with commercials so you didn't notice these details so much, like how they flew there on a very futuristic aircraft while wearing big 197O's shirt collars and the computers were still analog reel to reel tape machines like the 1960's.
The ending chase is great the pace was just right. There is a bodycount as gunslinger does kill and it’s really cold too with no emotion which shows why Richard’s Benjamin character is running for his life.
As an 8 year old in '73, Yul gave me nightmares. In '73 this movie was one of the best si fy of its time. Now a cult classic, and I have collected all of Yul movies along with John Wayne.
Great work again Stam Fine. 'Westworld' strikes me as one of those movies where it's the concept and the inherent issues it raises far outreach the product itself. In this age of AI and human-like robots, I can imagine it will very likely be viewed through a further prism of relevance.
I met Michael Crichton once in Berlin when he showed a computer game he was designing. I remember how he stood out among the guests, he was a very tall man, easily 6 and a half foot.
Saw this in the 70s as a kid; loved it. Major fan of Westerns and Sci fi and and time travel and fish out of water scenarios, so this movie was like a dream come true. I was blown away by the special FX and actually didn't mind it slowing for the chase, since it made it scarier for me. But I had hoped we'd get to see a bit more of the other "worlds" (though not any less if the wild west). Really hoped for a sequel that would show those (but boy what a sequel) or even a Saturday cartoon. But not a single comic, coloring book or toy?! And that ending, though I dont recall it, made feel like it just suddenly stopped and no wrap up. Another fun video, thanks.
How would YOU have improved the suspensfull chase at the end? the revelation to Benjamin, of the reality of it all, in the dungeon like labs, the clever wax museum type scene when the robots finally wear down (also so many figures together confusing Yul Brynner's vision and computer brain), the advice about using acid, for his eyes, also that Brolin is not the only human to be killed by Brynner, demonstrating he IS NOT going to stop.
Absolutely love this movie, I saw it when it first came out as a kid at a drive in, still watch it every year. Great concept, the HBO series is terrible.
I'm amazed you missed the major point of how this movie is one of the first places where the concept of computer viruses was addressed and the potential/implications of such things.
Im 40 years old. Just watched this yesterday, and I can see a ton of influences taken from this film in the many movies I've seen. Highly recommended if you've never seen the movie. The blu-ray also has the pilot from a tv show that came after. Cool stuff
I'm sorry, but the chase scene is magnificent suspense. There's a part where gunslinger walks into an alleyway and comes out riding a horse- except the time elapsed is way too soon for such an action to have happened. Very dissonant and disturbing psychological cue that we're witnessing a machine.
After a rewatch, I've decided that this movie is much better than I remember. A nice change from all the rubber-man CGI we see today. Ironically, this was the first feature film to use that technology.
The real genius here is that the computer graphic display was mentioned as damaged, which, in the writer's mind, would account for technology changing over time. If the display is damaged, then that accounts for how primitive the display is.
Your take is wrong, but I can see how you arrived at that. This is how the androids were intended to see by the resort scientists. The reason the vision display looks so primitive is because it's the firt time in cinematic history that CGI was used in major motion picture. It cost the movie studio 70,000 dollars a second to create.
Still an ingenious film compared to boring movie themes of today. It may have seemed cheesy with special effects, but it was great to me! Yul at his best!
THIS was the best Westworld story out of all the stories, including that 'meh' one that came out on HBO. I didn't even finish the first season of it. I got too bored with it. Some stories are just best told in a few hours.
Luved this movie as a kid... disagree with you about the last half of the film... think there's plenty of action... Crichton effectively ratchets up the tension which is sold completely by Brynner's chilling performance and Benjamin's fear.
People don't seem to want to see the parallels, between WESTWORLD, ROBOCOP and even THE TERMINATOR, here is the sci fi template for how to make science fiction action thrillers, as surely as- STAR WARS & ALIEN, Re-invented cinema in later years.
I thought was a pretty good movie. The scene when he is in the huge dining hall in medieval world and the King and Queen robots are just staring was so creepy to me.
I completely forgot about The Bionic Woman v. The Fembots...Thank you! th-cam.com/video/clPPxk3ZV2w/w-d-xo.html That grimace Lindsey Wagner makes after biatchslapping that Fembot's face off is funny now, but I'm sure as a 10-12 y/o kid was as horrified by this scene as much as The Gunman's melty face in the Westworld movie.
Thanks for sharing this video I have this film, he is the very 1st terminator before Arnie, it's a good film I was 2 years old when this film came out wow yul is definitely a scary robot I felt sorry for James been killed for real omg & I felt bad for his friend who was hunted by Yui its terrifying a terminator that won't stop until your dead I'm just asking how did the men who operated the theme park end up dead in the locked room what did Yui do?please let me know if anyone knows how Yui killed the men and how did he control the computers? I know he was much more advanced in robotics than all the others in the park is it because he was shot a lot by guests or was it something else that made him go on a killing spree? I do know one male guest left his wife deliberately at the theme park & he took a female robot home with him, there hands was how you could tell who's a guest & who's a robot.
It was great watching the source material for the show, but definitely slow and simple in comparison. Yul carried the film for me. Oh, funny! Rewatching the stepford wives was next on my watch list 😝
He's is beaten, he's not, he's beaten, he's not, he's finally beaten. Where have I heard that before? Oh, right, Terminator. Terminattor got a lot from Westworld.
The movie is so much better than the TV show it's unreal. And I thought the first season (only the first) of the show was phenomenal, it's just the following seasons wasted that so bad. James Cameron once said Yul Brynner's character in Westworld was a big influence on Terminator. The image of him coldly stalking people along corridors, it's easy to see what he meant.
i agree. i enjoyed the tv series first season, but even then it felt like there was less of a plan for the story and plot, and more that they were making it up on the spot and didn't know where to go with it. Anthony Hopkins character does a lot of non sensical things in it for one. but it still reached a satisfying conclusion (first season).
Don't understand how you can say the chase scene was not good! it was the perfect last act of the movie! At the time it was one of the scariest things any human can imagine! Being chased by an unstoppable run-amok killer robot!
I really enjoyed the film but was gutted to find out that it hadn't been developed from a Crichton book (like Jurassic Park) as I find the books a lot more fleshed out and a fascinating read, something which wasn't possible with Westworld.
The original Terminator raised the bar considerably for plausible-looking robot innards, but I still remember how much the inside of the gunslinger's head creeped me out when I saw this movie as a kid. That funnel-shaped oval thing behind the mouth is particularly grotesque. I never noticed until now that the prop implies there are actuators in the face - there are two wiring harnesses running to them, although we never get to see them. It doesn't really make a lot of sense from an engineer's perspective, but it's still pretty creepy.
being old and having seen this in the 70's when it was released, I think the film is far superior to the HBO series which became tedious in fairly quick order.
You don't realize how desensitized you are when you talk about west world being slow and not scary. When this came out or was extremely tense and scary. To put it in a different context, there was a time when seeing a woman's ankle was as arousing and stimulating as seeing her genitalia. There was a time when fake blood was considered too realistic. And today a half dozen movies come out every October that are horrific and realistic. Often including dismemberment or scenes of extended torture and people laugh while watching them. You really can't undo your emotional numbness from watching too many more intense, faster-paced movies. However I can say it applies in the other direction as well. We had a guest come and visit us at the beach house and we were doing nothing and she said how quiet it was as a positive at first and within 3 hours it was driving her crazy and she had to go home. She couldn't survive without constant stimulation.
helo stamfine Michael Crichton is a "Visionary" an Analog seer predicting a digital future a superlative Creator master of Worlds which can be enliven retold re-imagined so rich yet concise is his prose
Love when they advertise " was it worth a $1000 a day?" Yeah right even in 1973 a $1k a day would be way too cheap. A large hotel suite or a bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel would have cost more than a grand a night back then. Something like Westworld would be a minimum of a million dollars a day if not more. This would be a place for the super mega rich only. Even Space X at $300k a ride would be chump change in comparison to blasting robots with guns and such.
Yul Brynner smiling evilly with golden android eyes still looks chilling to this day.
Quite true.
they said they gave him chrome contact lenzes... nice...
First Terminator
I actually think the ending chase is the best part. It's so stark and quiet. The style of that sequence had a massive influence on what I find aesthetically pleasing, along with Pee-Wee's Big Adventure and Flight of the Navigator.
I saw that movie at the drive-in as a kid. The chase scared the heck out of me!
Stam Fine is a clown, this was an absolutely brilliant, and highly influential movie for its time.
It’s very memorable and gripping,no doubt.
I had a TV in my room when I was 13 and I couldn't sleep one summer night, so I turned on the TV at 2 am, and Westworld was starting. I watched it start to finish and it was the greatest movie I had ever seen at the time.
Yul Brynner: The OG Terminator.
This movie, the Buck Rogers episode with Jamie lee Curtis, and the outer limits seem to be the basis for the Terminator.
@@MrCornrowz Check out 'Cyborg 2087' from 1966 - it's literally the exact plot of 'The Terminator'.
@@MrCornrowzDon't forget Saturn 3 with Farrah Fawcet
I watched on TV when I was a child, at the end of 70's. Amazing
I did, too.
@@reving19 me too!
My dad took me to see this at the cinema as a birthday treat. I was 11. Unforgettable.
Cheers
Terrific film, outstanding entertainment to watch. Watched it so many times on the TV.
Yul Brynner: The blueprint to James Cameron's Terminator. OG baby.
This channel is criminally under appreciated, that view count should have three more zeroes after it, and I don't mean after a decimal point.
A nice touch to the movie was having Yul Brynner''s wardrobe mirror that of his character in magnificent seven. It adds an extra layer of "this can't be real" to the movie.
Brynner totally nailed that strut along the sidewalk.
Very true.
Without _Westworld,_ we might never have gotten _The Terminator._
Of course not. Westworld is the father of and inspiration behind the Terminator, Jurassic Park, Halloween and FNAF franchises
Westworld is a favorite. I didn't get to see it until it came to TV. My sister saw it at the theater and I remember her coming home and talking about it. Some years later I caught it when it came to Saturday night at the movies and absolutely loved it. One night while driving home, these guys on talk radio mentioned that Yul Brynner was the 1st Terminator.
Always loved this flick. Great idea and enjoyable. The sound of Yul Bryners boots clicking on the ground will forever be associated for me with impending menace. Way more fun than the show...which just disappeared up its own arse.
And James Cameron said he created the Terminator after seeing it during a feverish nightmare...
The ending chase always reminds me of Terminator, right down to the scene of Brenner walking down the hallway with the interspersed lights over head. There’s a similar scene in the factory in Terminator as the robot walks down the hallway in the factory. Also, like in west world, the robot is hard to kill.
Thinking about it… I feel west world was a larger influence on Terminator then I even realized.
You are correct. It was a inspiration for James Cameron Terminator...
One thing I have a question about. Brolin's character stated that in Westworld the guns have sensors which prevent you from shooting a human. However, how in Medieval World or Roman World do you prevent a guest from stabbing another guest with a sword?
Blunt edges, but when they become sentient, given their physical superiority the robots might slice a human with a pipe.
On the reverse, robots could "act" being cut by a blunt weapon accordingly.
Some of those fair maidens fell by the pork sword methinks
More sensors
Apparently not. The movie had a lot of flaws like that, but I grew up with it shown on TV chopped up with commercials so you didn't notice these details so much, like how they flew there on a very futuristic aircraft while wearing big 197O's shirt collars and the computers were still analog reel to reel tape machines like the 1960's.
And who gets to clean out the hooker fem-bots at the end of the week? '😨' (Perhaps they have a power hose with a special nozzle...) 😰
When you were there in that year watching this movie nothing was better.
I remember 1973 as a year of great movie releases that I still enjoy to this day.
Saw Westworld When It First Came Out. Love Yul Brynner, As The Gunslinger. Perfectly Cast. Terrific Movie. RIP Yul.
The ending chase is great the pace was just right. There is a bodycount as gunslinger does kill and it’s really cold too with no emotion which shows why Richard’s Benjamin character is running for his life.
Saw it as a kid when it was new. Thought Yul B was scary as hell. On first viewing of the original Terminator it reminded me of Westworld.
I've always enjoyed this movie. Saw it as a teen and it's always been a go-to.
It was great, and Brynner is the real first Terminator.
As an 8 year old in '73, Yul gave me nightmares. In '73 this movie was one of the best si fy of its time. Now a cult classic, and I have collected all of Yul movies along with John Wayne.
Great work again Stam Fine.
'Westworld' strikes me as one of those movies where it's the concept and the inherent issues it raises far outreach the product itself. In this age of AI and human-like robots, I can imagine it will very likely be viewed through a further prism of relevance.
I met Michael Crichton once in Berlin when he showed a computer game he was designing. I remember how he stood out among the guests, he was a very tall man, easily 6 and a half foot.
Saw this in the 70s as a kid; loved it. Major fan of Westerns and Sci fi and and time travel and fish out of water scenarios, so this movie was like a dream come true. I was blown away by the special FX and actually didn't mind it slowing for the chase, since it made it scarier for me. But I had hoped we'd get to see a bit more of the other "worlds" (though not any less if the wild west). Really hoped for a sequel that would show those (but boy what a sequel) or even a Saturday cartoon. But not a single comic, coloring book or toy?! And that ending, though I dont recall it, made feel like it just suddenly stopped and no wrap up. Another fun video, thanks.
There was a sequel called Futureworld that had guests become astronauts.
It is such a great and memorable film!
How would YOU have improved the suspensfull chase at the end?
the revelation to Benjamin, of the reality of it all, in the dungeon like labs, the clever wax museum type scene when the robots finally wear down (also so many figures together confusing Yul Brynner's vision and computer brain), the advice about using acid, for his eyes, also that Brolin is not the only human to be killed by Brynner, demonstrating he IS NOT going to stop.
That ending chase was brilliant.
Stam Fine absolutely has no clue what he's talking about.
The _idea_ of this then-groundbreaking film is arguably more impressive than the _execution_ thereof.
this film is much better than you're letting on - a great idea done serviceably with a small budget
" Which, I'm told, is a location rather than a specific act. "
Mate, that's the best line I've heard all week. Keep 'em coming!
Absolutely love this movie, I saw it when it first came out as a kid at a drive in, still watch it every year. Great concept, the HBO series is terrible.
I saw the movie when I was 11 and the chase still gives me sweaty palms to this day!
I'm amazed you missed the major point of how this movie is one of the first places where the concept of computer viruses was addressed and the potential/implications of such things.
Stam Fine missed A LOT of major points with this movie.
His takes were incredibly lazy & half-assed.
Im 40 years old. Just watched this yesterday, and I can see a ton of influences taken from this film in the many movies I've seen. Highly recommended if you've never seen the movie.
The blu-ray also has the pilot from a tv show that came after. Cool stuff
Still think it was a great movie! A lot of tension and excitement❤
You can take the piss but this is a classic and terrified me a a small kid 😂
I still think that *Coma* (1978) is Mike Crichton's best '70s movie - it's a really great suspenseful hospital Horror/Thriller imo, super creepy
I love the last hour. Tension at its best.
These early 70s movies were so good
I'm sorry, but the chase scene is magnificent suspense. There's a part where gunslinger walks into an alleyway and comes out riding a horse- except the time elapsed is way too soon for such an action to have happened. Very dissonant and disturbing psychological cue that we're witnessing a machine.
After a rewatch, I've decided that this movie is much better than I remember. A nice change from all the rubber-man CGI we see today. Ironically, this was the first feature film to use that technology.
For some reason I was expecting something at the end. I was not eggspecting that.
A Westworld double bill awaiting me when I get home from work? Awesome!! Thank Mr Stam Fine!!
The pixilated effect for the IR vision was invented tech for this movie.
It's the very first use of CGI in any movie.
That's quite a historical feat, imo.
Incidentally, it cost the studio 70,000 dollars a second. 😮
@@redriderbbgun8018 Also the first widely distributed public mention of a "virus" that could infect computers.
I was terrified by the end chase as a young kid watching on TV ...
The real genius here is that the computer graphic display was mentioned as damaged, which, in the writer's mind, would account for technology changing over time. If the display is damaged, then that accounts for how primitive the display is.
Your take is wrong, but I can see how you arrived at that.
This is how the androids were intended to see by the resort scientists.
The reason the vision display looks so primitive is because it's the firt time in cinematic history that CGI was used in major motion picture. It cost the movie studio 70,000 dollars a second to create.
Still an ingenious film compared to boring movie themes of today. It may have seemed cheesy with special effects, but it was great to me! Yul at his best!
THIS was the best Westworld story out of all the stories, including that 'meh' one that came out on HBO. I didn't even finish the first season of it. I got too bored with it. Some stories are just best told in a few hours.
Luved this movie as a kid... disagree with you about the last half of the film... think there's plenty of action... Crichton effectively ratchets up the tension which is sold completely by Brynner's chilling performance and Benjamin's fear.
Superb as always. Thank you.
You get extra credit for The Twilight Zone Uncle Simon reference.
People don't seem to want to see the parallels, between WESTWORLD, ROBOCOP and even THE TERMINATOR, here is the sci fi template for how to make science fiction action thrillers, as surely as- STAR WARS & ALIEN, Re-invented cinema in later years.
Yul Brynner makes me need an adult and I am 34 years old.
Oh the movie where James Brolin looks exactly like Christian Bale.
I literally had to look 2x to make sure I was looking at James Brolin and not Christian Bale😁
Josh brolin has a brother from another mother, (Christian bale) 🤣
I saw it as a litle child on TV and couldn't sleep that night.
A few days later there was TheMagnificentSeven...🥶
I thought was a pretty good movie. The scene when he is in the huge dining hall in medieval world and the King and Queen robots are just staring was so creepy to me.
9:43 .. what was that ? an apple mobile phone..!
Love this film. The only thing I ever asked was why did the robots have normal guns? Risk assessment n all that.
he wrote so many good story line.....the forbin project was his on top of my list.
I completely forgot about The Bionic Woman v. The Fembots...Thank you!
th-cam.com/video/clPPxk3ZV2w/w-d-xo.html
That grimace Lindsey Wagner makes after biatchslapping that Fembot's face off is funny now, but I'm sure as a 10-12 y/o kid was as horrified by this scene as much as The Gunman's melty face in the Westworld movie.
Thanks for sharing this video I have this film, he is the very 1st terminator before Arnie, it's a good film I was 2 years old when this film came out wow yul is definitely a scary robot I felt sorry for James been killed for real omg & I felt bad for his friend who was hunted by Yui its terrifying a terminator that won't stop until your dead I'm just asking how did the men who operated the theme park end up dead in the locked room what did Yui do?please let me know if anyone knows how Yui killed the men and how did he control the computers? I know he was much more advanced in robotics than all the others in the park is it because he was shot a lot by guests or was it something else that made him go on a killing spree? I do know one male guest left his wife deliberately at the theme park & he took a female robot home with him, there hands was how you could tell who's a guest & who's a robot.
best intro gag ever
Classic film
Richard Benjamin was also in love at first bite. You should do that movie.
01:37 Yeah, its all about banging robots! LOL
😁😂👍
It was great watching the source material for the show, but definitely slow and simple in comparison. Yul carried the film for me.
Oh, funny! Rewatching the stepford wives was next on my watch list 😝
He's is beaten, he's not, he's beaten, he's not, he's finally beaten.
Where have I heard that before? Oh, right, Terminator. Terminattor got a lot from Westworld.
The movie is so much better than the TV show it's unreal. And I thought the first season (only the first) of the show was phenomenal, it's just the following seasons wasted that so bad.
James Cameron once said Yul Brynner's character in Westworld was a big influence on Terminator. The image of him coldly stalking people along corridors, it's easy to see what he meant.
i agree. i enjoyed the tv series first season, but even then it felt like there was less of a plan for the story and plot, and more that they were making it up on the spot and didn't know where to go with it. Anthony Hopkins character does a lot of non sensical things in it for one. but it still reached a satisfying conclusion (first season).
Imagine if Kubrick directs this 😊
03:20 5 huge ashtrays on one table!? How much smoking are they doing there?
If the air runs out in the control room, then open up the fire escape door to get some air.
They did NOT have flat screen cellphones during those times , you guys added that on in this video clip I know 🤣
oh, DUDE! Stam you should do a video on some Red Dwarf!
Every time I see that actor I think of the TV show Quark. (ooh, review that, if you can find anywhere that screens it, it's kind of obscure).
Don't understand how you can say the chase scene was not good! it was the perfect last act of the movie! At the time it was one of the scariest things any human can imagine! Being chased by an unstoppable run-amok killer robot!
I really enjoyed the film but was gutted to find out that it hadn't been developed from a Crichton book (like Jurassic Park) as I find the books a lot more fleshed out and a fascinating read, something which wasn't possible with Westworld.
The original Terminator raised the bar considerably for plausible-looking robot innards, but I still remember how much the inside of the gunslinger's head creeped me out when I saw this movie as a kid. That funnel-shaped oval thing behind the mouth is particularly grotesque. I never noticed until now that the prop implies there are actuators in the face - there are two wiring harnesses running to them, although we never get to see them. It doesn't really make a lot of sense from an engineer's perspective, but it's still pretty creepy.
Steve Austin, the Six Million Dollar Man had a prop leg or arm in the intro, I can’t remember which that was cool and creepy to me.
being old and having seen this in the 70's when it was released, I think the film is far superior to the HBO series which became tedious in fairly quick order.
I liked this movie a lot as a teen
You don't realize how desensitized you are when you talk about west world being slow and not scary.
When this came out or was extremely tense and scary.
To put it in a different context, there was a time when seeing a woman's ankle was as arousing and stimulating as seeing her genitalia.
There was a time when fake blood was considered too realistic. And today a half dozen movies come out every October that are horrific and realistic. Often including dismemberment or scenes of extended torture and people laugh while watching them.
You really can't undo your emotional numbness from watching too many more intense, faster-paced movies.
However I can say it applies in the other direction as well. We had a guest come and visit us at the beach house and we were doing nothing and she said how quiet it was as a positive at first and within 3 hours it was driving her crazy and she had to go home. She couldn't survive without constant stimulation.
The recent WestWorld was really great but then they released series two . . .
It's not very clear in your review, but does this film feature people banging robots?
Runaway was good too
Damm good movie with a sequel full of potential, but failed to execute.
helo stamfine Michael Crichton is a "Visionary" an Analog seer predicting a digital future a superlative Creator master of Worlds which can be enliven retold re-imagined so rich yet concise is his prose
I just watched this and it was good
Yul Brynner.. The first TERMINATOR.
I feel like this is a film I caught most of on BBC 2 late on a Friday while channel hopping. Looks alright
Funny how the concept of having sex with robots never tires.
Something in that for all of us.
pls review the stepford wives!
I'll take a low budget movie with a director who cares over the plethora of soulless movies being made today. Love Westworld.
This scenario isn't far away........
josh Brolin character was he a Robot . was he bothering you '' hes not gonna bother uuuu again ...lol
Love when they advertise " was it worth a $1000 a day?" Yeah right even in 1973 a $1k a day would be way too cheap. A large hotel suite or a bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel would have cost more than a grand a night back then. Something like Westworld would be a minimum of a million dollars a day if not more. This would be a place for the super mega rich only. Even Space X at $300k a ride would be chump change in comparison to blasting robots with guns and such.
@ 10:31 *THANK YOU*
Loved season 1 and then..... *WTF?!?*
1:19 Flat screen imagined in 1973 became reality in 1997.
Alan Oppenheimer Being All Pre Skeletor.