Movie · 1976 · Action, Science Fiction · 1h 58m · PG · English
Curator score: 3.1/10 (108.6K ratings)
Welcome to the 23rd century. The perfect world of total pleasure...there's just one catch.
Overview
In the 23rd century, inhabitants of a domed city freely experience all of life's pleasures — but no one is allowed to live past 30. Citizens can try for a chance at being "renewed" in a civic ceremony on their 30th birthday. Escape is the only other option.
Ratings
Curator score: 3.1/10
IMDb: 6.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.30/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 58%
Metacritic: 53
TMDB: 6.6/10
Director
Michael Anderson
Production
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Cast
Michael York, Richard Jordan, Jenny Agutter, Roscoe Lee Browne, Farrah Fawcett, Michael Anderson Jr., Peter Ustinov, Randolph Roberts, Lara Lindsay, Gary Morgan, Michelle Stacy, Laura Hippe, David Westberg, Camilla Carr, Greg Lewis, Ashley Cox, Bill Couch, Glenn R. Wilder, Joe L. Blevins, Roger Borden
Where to watch
Philo
Curator Review
Verdict
A very 70s dystopian sci-fi curiosity: visually inventive, conceptually sticky, and often more fun as a time capsule than as a tightly paced thriller. Its world-building and production design still land, even if the plotting can feel blunt and the middle drags.
Best for
fans of retro-futurist sci-fi
viewers who enjoy dystopian concepts more than polished storytelling
people curious about 1970s production design and effects
cult-movie completists
Skip if
you want brisk pacing and modern action
you’re allergic to dated effects and camp
you prefer subtle world-building over on-the-nose allegory
you need a fully satisfying ending
Overview
Logan's Run is one of those mid-70s studio sci-fi films that feels both ambitious and slightly unhinged. The premise is strong enough to carry the whole movie: a pleasure-saturated society built on a hard expiration date, with escape as the only real heresy. That idea gives the film a clean, memorable hook and a surprisingly durable dystopian chill.
Worth noting
What makes it worth revisiting is the texture. The costumes, sets, and effects have a glossy, artificial weirdness that is very much of its era, and the movie leans into that rather than hiding it. It can be slow, and some of the ideas are stated so plainly they lose a little mystery, but the film keeps drifting into strange, watchable images and moods.
Bottom line
As a story, it is more fascinating than elegant. The first half is the stronger stretch, when the rules of the world are still being uncovered and the escape feels genuinely perilous. Later passages become more uneven, but the film remains a useful artifact of pre-Star Wars studio sci-fi: imaginative, earnest, and just odd enough to linger in memory.
Top Letterboxd reviews
CinemaVoid 🏴☠️ (2.5★) · 803 likes
A movie about wanting to go outside and then hating it once you’re out there because everything hurts and there are no orgies. Can relate.
Ethan Colburn (3★) · 367 likes
A really bizarre 70s sci fi movie.
It’s slow, paranoid, and super 70s. Interesting to think this one won best special effects the year before Star Wars given that they feel a decade apart.
While it drags at times, it’s laughably pretty fun. Especially the part where they discover “outside” and start feeling old man’s wrinkles.
I can’t say I’d strongly recommend it, but it’s definitely a vibe.
russman (3.5★) · 341 likes
Surprised it's still possible to watch this film after 2006
Justin LaLiberty (3★) · 293 likes
We really need to return to an era that allowed for a PG film to contain a trippy, writhing naked body filled orgy scene.
Wood (4★) · 224 likes
Wow this is the most 1976 thing to ever exist. Within the first 40 seconds you can tell this was made in the year of our lord nineteen hundred and seventy six. Full of dystopia jumpsuits, laser guns, and cats. Michael York is a weird looking dude, probably not leading man material but I guess it works.
1979 · Action, Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 31m · R · Curator 4.1/10 (325.8K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
If the appeal is escape, pursuit, and a future society stripped down to survival, this is a natural next stop.