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The Lawnmower Man (1992) - movie plots

The Lawnmower Man (1992)

User Rating
51%
(65 votes)
Critic Rating
75%
(1 review)
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Quotes (9)
Trivia (3)
Plot Description
Soundtrack
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Directed by
Brett Leonard

Written by
Stephen King, Brett Leonard

Cast
Jeff Fahey, Pierce Brosnan, Jenny Wright, Mark Bringleson, Geoffrey Lewis [more]


Release Date
• USA: Mar 6, 1992
DVD Release Date
• R1: Dec 16, 1997
• R2: 8 May 2000

Budget $10,000,000

MPAA Rating
R

Running Time
1 hour, 47 minutes

Country USA, UK

Studio Allied Vision, Fuji Eight Company, New Line Cinema

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• The Lawnmower Man
• Stephen King's The Lawnmower Man (1992)
• Virtual Wars (1992)



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 Synopses for The Lawnmower Man (1992)
1.

In 1992, The Lawnmower Man was hailed as a CGI (computer-generated image) breakthrough. It's fascinating to consider it in a historical context, knowing it came just a year after Terminator 2: Judgment Day and was followed by Jurassic Park a year later. Written and directed by Brett Leonard, The Lawnmower Man focuses on a scientist (Pierce Brosnan) trying to utilize technology for governmental gain. As with all top-secret government projects in the movies, it goes horribly wrong. Forced to progress from a chimp to a human subject, Brosnan secretly recruits local backwards boy and lawnmower pusher Jobe (Jeff Fahey). The increases in intelligence are alarming. He learns Latin in two hours, becomes an object of sexual desire (apparently all it takes is cowboy boots), and then develops telepathic and telekinetic abilities. What the film ought to be remembered and appreciated for are the visuals, which undoubtedly advanced the arcade and home computer game industry. --Paul Tonks
  

2.A reasonably benevolent scientist decides to test his virtual reality computer program on a mentally-retarded young gardener who has often been brutally taunted, teased and exploited. The experiment, which sends nearly-real computer generated impulses to the man's brain, results in the gardener growing ever more intelligent. As his perceptive ability crosses into the extra-sensory, he seeks revenge on those who used to humiliate and hurt him.   

3.Dr. Lawrence Angelo is a brilliant scientist obsessed with perfecting a revolutionary Virtual Reality computer software. When his experiments on animals fail, he finds the ideal substitute: Jobe Smith, a slow-witted gardener - The Lawnmower Man. Dr. Angelo's goal is to benefit his human guinea pig and ultimately mankind itself. But evil lurks...in the guise of "The Shop," a shadowy group that seeks to use the technology to create an invincible war machine. When the experiments change the simple Lawnmower Man into a superhuman being, the stage is set for a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde struggle for the control of Jobe's mind and the future of the world   

4.In 1992, The Lawnmower Man was hailed as a CGI (Computer Generated Image) breakthrough. It's fascinating to consider the effects in a historical context, knowing it came just a year after T2: Judgment Day and was followed by Jurassic Park a year later. Written and directed by Bill Leonard, this was intended to showcase how realistic digital likenesses and landscapes had become. Little did they know that Toy Story was already in pre-production! The story hangs on the concept that a scientist gain (Pierce Brosnan) is drafted in to utilise the technology for governmental. As with all top-secret government projects in the movies, it all goes horribly wrong. Forced to progress from a chimp to a human subject, Brosnan secretly recruits local backwards boy and lawnmower pusher Jobe (Jeff Fahey). The increases in intelligence are alarming. He learns Latin in two hours, becomes an object of sexual desire (all it takes is cowboy boots apparently), and then develops telepathic and telekinetic abilities. Some very overt religious analogy is in evidence. Jobe's beatings by a priest give way to an eventual crucifixion on the spinning wheel that allows him to enter Virtual Reality. Will he be resurrected for a sequel? Such questions were what Stephen King took extreme exception to when his name was placed before the title. A lawsuit took care of that. What the film ought to be remembered and appreciated for though are the visuals, which undoubtedly advanced the arcade and home computer game industry. --Paul Tonks   



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Lawnmower Man 2: Beyond Cyberspace (1996)
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Moonwalker (1988)
Jurassic Park (1993)

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