Genre: | Drama Sci-fi |
Director: | Leslie Libman Larry Williams |
Executive Producer: | Dan Wigutow |
Producer: | Michael R. Joyce |
Teleplay: | Dan Mazur David Tausik |
Starring: | Peter Gallagher Leonard Nimoy Tim Guinee Rya Kihlstedt Sally Kirkland Miguel Ferrer |
Cinematography: | Ronald Víctor García |
Editor: | Cindy Mollo |
Music: | Daniel Licht |
Company: | Dan Wigutow Productions HOF Productions Michael R. Joyce Productions Studios USA Pictures |
Network: | NBC |
Runtime: | 87 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Brave New World is a 1998 television movie[1] loosely based on Aldous Huxley's 1932 novel of the same name.[2] The film stars Peter Gallagher and Leonard Nimoy. It is an abridged version of the original story.[3] The film aired on NBC on April 19, 1998.[4]
The movie loosely follows the plot of Huxley's novel, but adds a twist to the end.
Just as Bernard Marx is about to take over the job of Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning, replacing the disgraced previous director, Lenina informs him that she is pregnant with his child. She conceived it the night that John Savage fell to his death. She did not use her birth control that night. Bernard suggests that she say it was an accident and have an abortion, but she makes it clear that she will not, and so prefers banishment.
Bernard lets her go – secretly – and takes the job he has aspired to throughout his career, but he is soon unhappy, and no amount of Soma can change that. He has seen and learned to appreciate genuine emotions and human experiences thanks to knowing John, as has Lenina. As a result, Bernard follows Lenina into exile from society.
Director Mustapha Mond looks for Bernard at their scheduled meeting, and is handed a note. The messenger explains that Bernard got away from society by authorizing a trip for himself. Mond laughs out loud to himself, indicating that he will not pursue them. The final scene shows a beach with Lenina and Bernard. They appear to be playing with their natural born daughter on the shore.
The New York Times Caryn James said:"The film fails to deal coherently with what is frightening about modern life and why".[5] Radio Times's David Parkinson said: "the over-simplification of the premise...will disappoint admirers of the novel".[6] City University of New Yorks Brittany Franklin finds the 1998 movie excludes the praise of Ford.[7] The Ringers Keith Phipps notes "Adapting it, on the other hand, proves far trickier. That’s partly because much of the novel is short on incident and long on ideas..."[8] ScreenRant's Padraig Cotter says the 1998 TV movie has "a happy ending".[9] [10]
. Brave New World. Aldous Huxley. Bantam Books (original). New York City (original). 1962. 1932. B000GG6OGM.