fbpx
Wikipedia

The Lathe of Heaven (film)

The Lathe of Heaven is a 1980 film adaptation of the 1971 science fiction novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin. It was produced in 1979 as part of New York City public television station WNET's Experimental TV Lab project, and directed by David Loxton and Fred Barzyk.[1] Le Guin, by her own account, was involved in the casting, script planning, re-writing, and filming of the production.[2]

The Lathe of Heaven
Cover of the 2000 video/DVD release of The Lathe of Heaven (1980)
GenreSci-Fi
Based onThe Lathe of Heaven
by Ursula K. Le Guin
Teleplay by
Directed by
Starring
Music byMichael Small
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producerDavid Loxton
Producers
  • Carol Brandenburg
  • Fred Barzyk
CinematographyRobbie Greenberg
EditorDick Bartlett
Running time120 minutes
Production companies
Budget$250,000
Original release
ReleaseJanuary 9, 1980 (1980-01-09)

The film stars Bruce Davison as protagonist George Orr, Kevin Conway as Dr. William Haber, and Margaret Avery as lawyer Heather LeLache.

Plot edit

In Portland, Oregon, in the near future, George Orr is charged with abuse of multiple prescription medications, which he was taking to keep himself from dreaming. Orr volunteers for psychiatric care to avoid prosecution, and is assigned to the care of licensed oneirologist William Haber. Orr's explanation of his drug abuse is incredible: He has known since age 17 that his dreams change reality, and tries to prevent himself from this "effective dreaming" because he fears their effects.

Haber initially considers Orr's fear as a delusional symptom of neurosis or psychosis, referring to him as "possibly an intelligent schizophrenic". The doctor puts Orr into a hypnotic trance while attached to the "Augmentor," a device he has invented for monitoring and enhancing, or augmenting, brainwaves during dreaming, to help with patient therapy. He encourages Orr to have an effective dream, recording his brain function all the while. The world changes slightly during this dream, and Haber realizes that Orr is telling the truth.

Haber begins to use Orr's effective dreams, first to create a prestigious, well-funded institute run by himself, then to attempt to solve various social problems. But these solutions unravel quickly: Haber suggests that Orr dream of an answer to overpopulation (resulting in a plague wiping out three-fourths of the human population), the end to all conflict on Earth (resulting in an alien invasion uniting mankind), and an end to racism (resulting in a world where everyone's skin is a uniform shade of gray).

Orr turns to lawyer Heather LeLache for help in getting out of his government-mandated treatments with Haber. LeLache doubts Orr's sanity, but agrees to help him, eventually becoming an ally. Orr falls in love with LeLache.

Only after several failed attempts to "make the world right" does Haber admit to Orr that he believes in Orr's power. Having used the Augmentor to record and analyze Orr's supremely complex dreaming brainwaves, Haber begins creating a machine that will allow him to have his own effective dreams, and remake reality directly.

As Haber continues to use Orr's dreams to create change in human society, Orr remembers a dream he experienced years ago, which is briefly portrayed at the opening of the film (and which, it turns out, is in fact reality): The world was destroyed in a nuclear war, and Orr was poisoned by radiation. In his dying moments, Orr dreamed a world where the war did not happen, resulting in the events of the film as we see them.

Haber enters the final version of his machine for directing dreams and learns this truth, driving him mad. Orr, who has joined him in the dream state, is able to stop Haber's nightmare before it destroys the world. The result is a reality that jumbles together elements of the different worlds that Haber created via Orr's dreams, but is relatively stable. Orr is heartbroken because the LeLache in this reality was never his close friend or lover.

As the film ends, Orr is working in an antique store run by an alien. LeLache comes in to browse. She has only a vague memory of him, but agrees to join him for lunch. They encounter Haber, in a wheelchair, on their way to lunch. Haber recognizes Orr, but cannot come out of his catatonia.

Cast edit

  • Bruce Davison as George Orr
  • Kevin Conway as Dr. William Haber
  • Margaret Avery as Heather LeLache
  • Niki Flacks as Penny Crouch
  • Peyton Park as Mannie Ahrens
  • Vandi Clark as Aunt Ethel
  • Jo Livingston as George's Father
  • Jane Roberts as Grandmother
  • Tom Matts as Grandfather
  • Frank Miller as Parole Officer
  • Joye Nash as Woman on Subway
  • Gena Sleete as Woman on Subway
  • Ben McKinley III as Orderly
  • R.A. Mihailoff as Orderly

Behind the scenes edit

Directors David Loxton and Fred Barzyk were pioneers in the early video art movement.[1] They met in 1968 at WGBH TV in Boston and collaborated for over 20 years, until Loxton's death in the early 1990s. The first science fiction drama they created together was a 1972 film called Between Time and Timbuktu, based on the work of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.[3]

With a two-week shooting schedule,[4] and a lean budget of about $250,000, Loxton and Barzyk had to get creative to effectively convey The Lathe of Heaven's deeper meanings and sometimes grand science fiction scenarios.[1] In an interview in 2000, Barzyk said:

David and I had a unique working relationship. We were co-producers, co-directors. If you really cut it down, I would run the set, and David would run behind-the-scenes. But when it came to content and the actual physical structure of the set, we had equal input. The reason that was important, especially on Lathe, is that we had a very limited budget, and we were moving into science fiction ... and let's face it, some of Ursula's ideas were pretty big. I mean, how the hell do we possibly even begin to portray the attack of aliens or the wiping out of billions of people with the plague? What it came down to was, we had to find metaphors. We had to find things that didn't cost that much money and still led to maybe the same kind of emotional impact. ... Our special effects in Lathe were not done the way they were because that was necessarily the direction we wanted to go. It was the direction we had to go. We didn't have enough money to be able to do these things, so we were constantly trying to figure out ways in which we could shoot something in half a day and imply vast amounts of impressions to the audience. For example, when everyone gets wiped out by the plague, we came up with the idea of putting people around a table and just constantly circling the table and making them distorted and growing older to imply all those people being killed. That was partly because we couldn't think of any other way to do it within the constraints of our budget. But we were also influenced by video artists. There was one artist who had taken fishwire and wrapped his face, for example, and so I used a variation of that in this scene. We grabbed from the art director the dust and the smoke and the cobwebs, and in effect we wound up using some of David's English heritage with the candelabras and the rest, which kind of went back to Great Expectations.[3]

The film was shot at locations in Dallas, Texas, and nearby Fort Worth rather than in Portland, Oregon.[5] These included the Dallas City Hall, the Tandy Center Fort Worth, Hyatt Regency Dallas and Reunion Tower, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, the Fort Worth Water Gardens and a vacated Mobil Oil Building in Fort Worth.[6] Le Guin, her husband, their fifteen-year-old son, and her husband's eighty-year-old Aunt Ruby appear as extras in a scene where Heather and George talk over lunch in a cafeteria.[7]

According to a 1978 article in The New York Times, during the process of funding a prospective series focused on "speculative fiction, a category of fairly recent vintage applied to ... the most thoughtful and provocative works of science fiction ... [such as] Arthur C. Clarke, Frank Herbert, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Anthony Burgess and Robert Heinlein," Le Guin was one of several authors whose novels were considered for adaptation: "The [$750,000] financing was awarded as the result of an earlier grant by [the Corporation for Public Broadcasting] to research and develop such a series. After much study with a team of consultants that included critics, authors, editors, publishers and professors, a list of candidates for the series was compiled, from which Miss LeGuin's novel was selected" to be the series pilot.[8]

At the time this funding was given, it was thought the film would be shot in Portland, Oregon, where the story takes place.[8]

Loxton and Barzyk hoped that Lathe would be the first production in a public television series exploring science fiction literature.[9] They created one more telefilm together under this rubric, 1983's Overdrawn at the Memory Bank, based on a short story by John Varley.

Reception and awards edit

When it first aired in 1980, The Lathe of Heaven became one of the two highest-rated shows that season on PBS, drawing 10 percent of the audience in New York and 8 percent in Chicago, according to Nielsen ratings.[10]

Michael Moore reviewed The Lathe of Heaven in Ares Magazine #1.[11] Moore commented that "One hopes some producers who plan yet more clones of Star Wars will have watched Lathe and learned that science fiction does not consist solely of dogfights in space and cardboard heroes facing 'gee-whiz' challenges. The best science fiction, such as Lathe, examines humankind's place in the universe and the products and problems created by intelligence."[11]

The Lathe of Heaven was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation. The screenplay was nominated for a Writers Guild Award for writers Roger Swaybill[12] and Diane English[13]

In 1998, Entertainment Weekly magazine named the 1980 Lathe telefilm one of the top 100 greatest works of science fiction.[14]

Of the 2000 re-release (see below), TV Guide wrote, "Unlike much current science fiction, it's driven by ideas rather than special effects, and Davison's subtle performance as George, who turns out to be a far tougher character than he at first appears, is a highlight."[15] In Cinescape, a reviewer praised the film as

an instant classic ... a film of ideas rather than action ... [W]hile the minuscule budget didn't grant the filmmakers the grandeur of some of Le Guin's set pieces in the novel, such as the alien invasion or the melting of Portland, the film's strength comes from its performers and the suspenseful concepts in the writing.[16]

Time magazine wrote:

Nineteen years before The Blair Witch Project, this classic sci-fi film showed that you can make an arresting fantasy with hardly more than the change under your couch cushions ... [S]ome of the no-budget effects haven't aged well--at one point the earth is visited by alien ships that look like electric hamburgers. The provocative exploration of consciousness, though, is priceless.[17]

2000 re-release edit

After its initial broadcast in 1980, Lathe was occasionally shown over the next eight years. PBS' rights to rebroadcast the program expired in 1988. The Lathe of Heaven went on to become the most-requested program in PBS history.[1]

Fans were critical of WNET's supposed "warehousing" of the film, but the budgetary barriers to rebroadcast were high. In a 2000 article, Joseph Basile, director of program rights and clearances for WNET, said, "'Lay people don't understand that to take a program out of mothballs, we have to pay for and clear rights with all participants in the program ... It's a difficult and time-consuming and expensive endeavor."[18]

Basile also had to negotiate a special agreement with the composer of the film's score, and deal with the Beatles recording excerpted in the original soundtrack, "With a Little Help from My Friends", which is integral to a plot point in both the novel and the film. A cover version replaces the Beatles' own recording, "which would have taken too long to clear and cost 'an arm and a leg'."[18]

Once rights issues were resolved, the film was cleaned up from two-inch Quadruplex videotape copies.[4] In 2000, Lathe was finally rebroadcast and released to video and DVD.[1] In addition to the film, this release features an interview with Ursula K. Le Guin by Bill Moyers, which initially aired along with the film's rebroadcast.

The back cover of the DVD notes, “The original film materials have been lost forever. A new digital master was created from the surviving 2″ tape and was then color corrected using state-of-the-art technology. Ghosting and darkening of the images may appear in some scenes. It is the best quality transfer possible of this important work using the only surviving materials.”

WNET has not said how much it cost to re-release Lathe, stating simply that it "wasn't cheap," and that hopefully royalties would help recoup the expense.[18]

Pop culture impact edit

Bruce Davison guest-starred in a 1995 episode of the television show The Outer Limits titled "White Light Fever" which features a visual homage to Lathe: a "tunnel of blue light" effect very similar to a special effect used near the end of the film. (An image from this sequence is featured on the cover of both the mass market paperback edition of the novel that was issued with the film's premiere, and the 2000 video/DVD release).

The novel was again adapted as a telefilm by A&E Networks in 2002, titled Lathe of Heaven.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Martin, Robert Scott; Earl, Jennifer (May 28, 2000). . Space.com. Archived from the original on 2000-06-19. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  2. ^ Le Guin, Ursula K. (2002). "About Films: The Lathe of Heaven". Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  3. ^ a b Witcover, Paul (May 29, 2000). . Sci Fi Weekly. SciFi.com. Archived from the original on 2009-02-25. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  4. ^ a b King, Susan (August 29, 2000). "PBS' first TV movie out on video, DVD". Chicago Sun-Times.
  5. ^ Le Guin, Ursula (1989). "Working on 'The Lathe'". Dancing on the Edge of the World. Grove Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-8021-3529-2.
  6. ^ "The Lathe of Heaven: Resources". Thirteen/WNET. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  7. ^ Le Guin 1989, p. 35.
  8. ^ a b Shepard, Richard F. (May 26, 1978). "TV: 'Amahl' Will Return for Christmas After 12 Years; $740,000 Grant to Aid WNET-TV Lab's Futuristic Pilots" (fee required). The New York Times. p. C26.
  9. ^ O'Connor, John J. (January 9, 1980). "TV: WNET Launches Sci-Fi Series" (fee required). The New York Times. p. C23.
  10. ^ Brown, Les (January 20, 1980). "Drama Series Proposed for Public TV; Ultimate Ideal Schedule Highest Audience Levels Uniform National Schedule" (fee required). The New York Times. p. 48.
  11. ^ a b Moore, Michael (March 1980). "Film & Television". Ares Magazine. Simulations Publications, Inc. (1): 26.
  12. ^ "Roger E. Swaybill; Novelist and Writer of 'Porky's' Was 47". The New York Times. January 22, 1991.
  13. ^ De Vries, Hilary (January 3, 1993). "Laughing Off the Recession". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  14. ^ Hochman, David (October 16, 1998). "Sci-Fi's Top 100". ew.com. Entertainment Weekly. p. 3. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  15. ^ McDonagh, Maitland. "The Lathe Of Heaven". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  16. ^ Szebin, Frederick C. (November 21, 2000). "The Lathe of Heaven". Mania.com. Retrieved 2008-05-13.
  17. ^ Poniewozik, James (May 28, 2000). . Time. Archived from the original on October 21, 2012.
  18. ^ a b c Bedford, Karen Everhart (May 1, 2000). "Fans' demand prompts revival of sci-fi classic". Current.org. Retrieved 2008-05-13.

External links edit

  • at Bruce Davison's Official web site
  • The Lathe of Heaven at IMDb  

lathe, heaven, film, 2002, television, movie, lathe, heaven, film, lathe, heaven, 1980, film, adaptation, 1971, science, fiction, novel, lathe, heaven, ursula, guin, produced, 1979, part, york, city, public, television, station, wnet, experimental, project, di. For the 2002 television movie see Lathe of Heaven film The Lathe of Heaven is a 1980 film adaptation of the 1971 science fiction novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K Le Guin It was produced in 1979 as part of New York City public television station WNET s Experimental TV Lab project and directed by David Loxton and Fred Barzyk 1 Le Guin by her own account was involved in the casting script planning re writing and filming of the production 2 The Lathe of HeavenCover of the 2000 video DVD release of The Lathe of Heaven 1980 GenreSci FiBased onThe Lathe of Heavenby Ursula K Le GuinTeleplay byRoger SwaybillDiane EnglishDirected byDavid LoxtonFred BarzykStarringBruce DavisonKevin ConwayMargaret AveryMusic byMichael SmallCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishProductionExecutive producerDavid LoxtonProducersCarol BrandenburgFred BarzykCinematographyRobbie GreenbergEditorDick BartlettRunning time120 minutesProduction companiesTaurus FilmWNETBudget 250 000Original releaseReleaseJanuary 9 1980 1980 01 09 The film stars Bruce Davison as protagonist George Orr Kevin Conway as Dr William Haber and Margaret Avery as lawyer Heather LeLache Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Behind the scenes 4 Reception and awards 5 2000 re release 6 Pop culture impact 7 References 8 External linksPlot editIn Portland Oregon in the near future George Orr is charged with abuse of multiple prescription medications which he was taking to keep himself from dreaming Orr volunteers for psychiatric care to avoid prosecution and is assigned to the care of licensed oneirologist William Haber Orr s explanation of his drug abuse is incredible He has known since age 17 that his dreams change reality and tries to prevent himself from this effective dreaming because he fears their effects Haber initially considers Orr s fear as a delusional symptom of neurosis or psychosis referring to him as possibly an intelligent schizophrenic The doctor puts Orr into a hypnotic trance while attached to the Augmentor a device he has invented for monitoring and enhancing or augmenting brainwaves during dreaming to help with patient therapy He encourages Orr to have an effective dream recording his brain function all the while The world changes slightly during this dream and Haber realizes that Orr is telling the truth Haber begins to use Orr s effective dreams first to create a prestigious well funded institute run by himself then to attempt to solve various social problems But these solutions unravel quickly Haber suggests that Orr dream of an answer to overpopulation resulting in a plague wiping out three fourths of the human population the end to all conflict on Earth resulting in an alien invasion uniting mankind and an end to racism resulting in a world where everyone s skin is a uniform shade of gray Orr turns to lawyer Heather LeLache for help in getting out of his government mandated treatments with Haber LeLache doubts Orr s sanity but agrees to help him eventually becoming an ally Orr falls in love with LeLache Only after several failed attempts to make the world right does Haber admit to Orr that he believes in Orr s power Having used the Augmentor to record and analyze Orr s supremely complex dreaming brainwaves Haber begins creating a machine that will allow him to have his own effective dreams and remake reality directly As Haber continues to use Orr s dreams to create change in human society Orr remembers a dream he experienced years ago which is briefly portrayed at the opening of the film and which it turns out is in fact reality The world was destroyed in a nuclear war and Orr was poisoned by radiation In his dying moments Orr dreamed a world where the war did not happen resulting in the events of the film as we see them Haber enters the final version of his machine for directing dreams and learns this truth driving him mad Orr who has joined him in the dream state is able to stop Haber s nightmare before it destroys the world The result is a reality that jumbles together elements of the different worlds that Haber created via Orr s dreams but is relatively stable Orr is heartbroken because the LeLache in this reality was never his close friend or lover As the film ends Orr is working in an antique store run by an alien LeLache comes in to browse She has only a vague memory of him but agrees to join him for lunch They encounter Haber in a wheelchair on their way to lunch Haber recognizes Orr but cannot come out of his catatonia Cast editBruce Davison as George Orr Kevin Conway as Dr William Haber Margaret Avery as Heather LeLache Niki Flacks as Penny Crouch Peyton Park as Mannie Ahrens Vandi Clark as Aunt Ethel Jo Livingston as George s Father Jane Roberts as Grandmother Tom Matts as Grandfather Frank Miller as Parole Officer Joye Nash as Woman on Subway Gena Sleete as Woman on Subway Ben McKinley III as Orderly R A Mihailoff as OrderlyBehind the scenes editDirectors David Loxton and Fred Barzyk were pioneers in the early video art movement 1 They met in 1968 at WGBH TV in Boston and collaborated for over 20 years until Loxton s death in the early 1990s The first science fiction drama they created together was a 1972 film called Between Time and Timbuktu based on the work of Kurt Vonnegut Jr 3 With a two week shooting schedule 4 and a lean budget of about 250 000 Loxton and Barzyk had to get creative to effectively convey The Lathe of Heaven s deeper meanings and sometimes grand science fiction scenarios 1 In an interview in 2000 Barzyk said David and I had a unique working relationship We were co producers co directors If you really cut it down I would run the set and David would run behind the scenes But when it came to content and the actual physical structure of the set we had equal input The reason that was important especially on Lathe is that we had a very limited budget and we were moving into science fiction and let s face it some of Ursula s ideas were pretty big I mean how the hell do we possibly even begin to portray the attack of aliens or the wiping out of billions of people with the plague What it came down to was we had to find metaphors We had to find things that didn t cost that much money and still led to maybe the same kind of emotional impact Our special effects in Lathe were not done the way they were because that was necessarily the direction we wanted to go It was the direction we had to go We didn t have enough money to be able to do these things so we were constantly trying to figure out ways in which we could shoot something in half a day and imply vast amounts of impressions to the audience For example when everyone gets wiped out by the plague we came up with the idea of putting people around a table and just constantly circling the table and making them distorted and growing older to imply all those people being killed That was partly because we couldn t think of any other way to do it within the constraints of our budget But we were also influenced by video artists There was one artist who had taken fishwire and wrapped his face for example and so I used a variation of that in this scene We grabbed from the art director the dust and the smoke and the cobwebs and in effect we wound up using some of David s English heritage with the candelabras and the rest which kind of went back to Great Expectations 3 The film was shot at locations in Dallas Texas and nearby Fort Worth rather than in Portland Oregon 5 These included the Dallas City Hall the Tandy Center Fort Worth Hyatt Regency Dallas and Reunion Tower Dallas Fort Worth International Airport the Fort Worth Water Gardens and a vacated Mobil Oil Building in Fort Worth 6 Le Guin her husband their fifteen year old son and her husband s eighty year old Aunt Ruby appear as extras in a scene where Heather and George talk over lunch in a cafeteria 7 According to a 1978 article in The New York Times during the process of funding a prospective series focused on speculative fiction a category of fairly recent vintage applied to the most thoughtful and provocative works of science fiction such as Arthur C Clarke Frank Herbert Kurt Vonnegut Jr Anthony Burgess and Robert Heinlein Le Guin was one of several authors whose novels were considered for adaptation The 750 000 financing was awarded as the result of an earlier grant by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to research and develop such a series After much study with a team of consultants that included critics authors editors publishers and professors a list of candidates for the series was compiled from which Miss LeGuin s novel was selected to be the series pilot 8 At the time this funding was given it was thought the film would be shot in Portland Oregon where the story takes place 8 Loxton and Barzyk hoped that Lathe would be the first production in a public television series exploring science fiction literature 9 They created one more telefilm together under this rubric 1983 s Overdrawn at the Memory Bank based on a short story by John Varley Reception and awards editWhen it first aired in 1980 The Lathe of Heaven became one of the two highest rated shows that season on PBS drawing 10 percent of the audience in New York and 8 percent in Chicago according to Nielsen ratings 10 Michael Moore reviewed The Lathe of Heaven in Ares Magazine 1 11 Moore commented that One hopes some producers who plan yet more clones of Star Wars will have watched Lathe and learned that science fiction does not consist solely of dogfights in space and cardboard heroes facing gee whiz challenges The best science fiction such as Lathe examines humankind s place in the universe and the products and problems created by intelligence 11 The Lathe of Heaven was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation The screenplay was nominated for a Writers Guild Award for writers Roger Swaybill 12 and Diane English 13 In 1998 Entertainment Weekly magazine named the 1980 Lathe telefilm one of the top 100 greatest works of science fiction 14 Of the 2000 re release see below TV Guide wrote Unlike much current science fiction it s driven by ideas rather than special effects and Davison s subtle performance as George who turns out to be a far tougher character than he at first appears is a highlight 15 In Cinescape a reviewer praised the film as an instant classic a film of ideas rather than action W hile the minuscule budget didn t grant the filmmakers the grandeur of some of Le Guin s set pieces in the novel such as the alien invasion or the melting of Portland the film s strength comes from its performers and the suspenseful concepts in the writing 16 Time magazine wrote Nineteen years before The Blair Witch Project this classic sci fi film showed that you can make an arresting fantasy with hardly more than the change under your couch cushions S ome of the no budget effects haven t aged well at one point the earth is visited by alien ships that look like electric hamburgers The provocative exploration of consciousness though is priceless 17 2000 re release editAfter its initial broadcast in 1980 Lathe was occasionally shown over the next eight years PBS rights to rebroadcast the program expired in 1988 The Lathe of Heaven went on to become the most requested program in PBS history 1 Fans were critical of WNET s supposed warehousing of the film but the budgetary barriers to rebroadcast were high In a 2000 article Joseph Basile director of program rights and clearances for WNET said Lay people don t understand that to take a program out of mothballs we have to pay for and clear rights with all participants in the program It s a difficult and time consuming and expensive endeavor 18 Basile also had to negotiate a special agreement with the composer of the film s score and deal with the Beatles recording excerpted in the original soundtrack With a Little Help from My Friends which is integral to a plot point in both the novel and the film A cover version replaces the Beatles own recording which would have taken too long to clear and cost an arm and a leg 18 Once rights issues were resolved the film was cleaned up from two inch Quadruplex videotape copies 4 In 2000 Lathe was finally rebroadcast and released to video and DVD 1 In addition to the film this release features an interview with Ursula K Le Guin by Bill Moyers which initially aired along with the film s rebroadcast The back cover of the DVD notes The original film materials have been lost forever A new digital master was created from the surviving 2 tape and was then color corrected using state of the art technology Ghosting and darkening of the images may appear in some scenes It is the best quality transfer possible of this important work using the only surviving materials WNET has not said how much it cost to re release Lathe stating simply that it wasn t cheap and that hopefully royalties would help recoup the expense 18 Pop culture impact editBruce Davison guest starred in a 1995 episode of the television show The Outer Limits titled White Light Fever which features a visual homage to Lathe a tunnel of blue light effect very similar to a special effect used near the end of the film An image from this sequence is featured on the cover of both the mass market paperback edition of the novel that was issued with the film s premiere and the 2000 video DVD release The novel was again adapted as a telefilm by A amp E Networks in 2002 titled Lathe of Heaven References edit a b c d e Martin Robert Scott Earl Jennifer May 28 2000 After 20 Years The Lathe of Heaven Returns Space com Archived from the original on 2000 06 19 Retrieved 2008 05 13 Le Guin Ursula K 2002 About Films The Lathe of Heaven Retrieved 2008 05 13 a b Witcover Paul May 29 2000 Fred Barzyk explores what dreams are made of Sci Fi Weekly SciFi com Archived from the original on 2009 02 25 Retrieved 2008 05 13 a b King Susan August 29 2000 PBS first TV movie out on video DVD Chicago Sun Times Le Guin Ursula 1989 Working on The Lathe Dancing on the Edge of the World Grove Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 8021 3529 2 The Lathe of Heaven Resources Thirteen WNET Retrieved 2008 05 13 Le Guin 1989 p 35 a b Shepard Richard F May 26 1978 TV Amahl Will Return for Christmas After 12 Years 740 000 Grant to Aid WNET TV Lab s Futuristic Pilots fee required The New York Times p C26 O Connor John J January 9 1980 TV WNET Launches Sci Fi Series fee required The New York Times p C23 Brown Les January 20 1980 Drama Series Proposed for Public TV Ultimate Ideal Schedule Highest Audience Levels Uniform National Schedule fee required The New York Times p 48 a b Moore Michael March 1980 Film amp Television Ares Magazine Simulations Publications Inc 1 26 Roger E Swaybill Novelist and Writer of Porky s Was 47 The New York Times January 22 1991 De Vries Hilary January 3 1993 Laughing Off the Recession The New York Times Retrieved 2008 05 13 Hochman David October 16 1998 Sci Fi s Top 100 ew com Entertainment Weekly p 3 Retrieved 2008 05 13 McDonagh Maitland The Lathe Of Heaven TVGuide com Retrieved 2008 05 13 Szebin Frederick C November 21 2000 The Lathe of Heaven Mania com Retrieved 2008 05 13 Poniewozik James May 28 2000 The Lathe of Heaven Time Archived from the original on October 21 2012 a b c Bedford Karen Everhart May 1 2000 Fans demand prompts revival of sci fi classic Current org Retrieved 2008 05 13 External links editThirteen WNET s The Lathe of Heaven web site archived version Lathe production stills at Bruce Davison s Official web site The Lathe of Heaven at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Lathe of Heaven film amp oldid 1176478649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.