Welcome to Blood City (1977) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
22 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Nice idea, clumsily handled.
BA_Harrison22 April 2013
The intriguing subject of virtual reality gets a rather unremarkable treatment in Peter Sasdy's sci-fi/western Welcome to Blood City, which sees a group of strangers unknowingly plugged into a computer simulation of a wild west town, the purpose being to identify natural fighters and leaders.

Keir Dullea puts in fine performance as Lewis, a recent arrival who gradually works his way up the social ladder, and Jack Palance is solid as the town's sheriff, but the film suffers from lifeless direction and a badly structured plot, which misses an opportunity for a neat twist at the end by revealing it's virtual reality angle way too early.

My copy was the dreadful pan and scan version, which didn't exactly help the viewing experience, but even cutting it some slack for this fact, Welcome to Blood City was decidedly mediocre. Westworld did the sci-fi/western thing so much better.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Nice place, shame about the plot
Bishop-1115 February 1999
A muddled attempt at an interesting premise - people are trained to perfect killers in a Wild West environment - which plays its trump card too early by revealing that Keir Dullea & friends are in a VR situation at the start, when it would have been more of a surprise to reveal it nearer the end, and we could have done with more of an explanation as to WHY the scientists are doing what they're doing and why the people involved have been selected. That said, the film just about keeps the viewer interested throughout, with the best performances coming from Dullea & Palance. It's all very similar, by the way, to "The Prisoner" episode "Living in Harmony", which also had its hero thrown into a VR wild-west scenario.
11 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Jack Palance Was Outstanding
whpratt112 July 2007
Always enjoy a film in which Jack Palance,(Frendlander) appears in and know that it will be a great film to view and this film was a big surprise for a 1977 film and I enjoyed it from beginning to end. This film starts out with a large group of men who were chained and pounding on rocks in a place that looked like a desert. Keir Dullea, (Lewis) was one of these men pounding rocks and all of a sudden he is being released by a proclamation from the President of the U.S. The next scene shows Lewis laying on the ground and wakes up and cannot remember anything at all and joins a group of other people in the same situation. These people eventually are met by Jack Palance, (Frendlander) who brings them to his town and they soon find out that they are going to become slaves in his town and have no future to be able to think for themselves. This is a Sci-Fi film and at this point, I cannot say anymore, except, don't miss this film, it is a great 1977 Classic.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A very odd film, that doesn't do enough with the potential it had
TheLittleSongbird30 June 2015
Jack Palance was the main reason to see this, and while he doesn't disappoint the film in general does. An interesting concept here, but not enough is done with it and the low budget really hinders it.

Palance's performance is also the best thing about the film, he is so much fun while keeping his dignity intact, he resists the temptation also to overact like he sometimes did in similar roles. In fact, the acting is the component that comes off the least badly here, Keir Dullea is decent and Samantha Eggar while deserving more to do gives the film's second best performance, being quite thoughtful and with a good deal of authority. Roy Budd provides an appropriately eerie and thrilling music score without intruding too much. There are also some charmingly offbeat parts in the script.

Welcome to Blood City however is badly let down by being so lifelessly directed by Peter Sasdy, who has shown before that he is a competent director, and the painfully obvious low budget, especially in the choppy editing, dizzying camera angles and dreadfully fuzzy picture quality. The settings are also pretty limited and never feel authentic. Apart from some offbeat moments, the script is completely devoid of tension, while the story is often very dull and the suspense is marred by the virtual reality concept being revealed far too early. There are some interesting ideas here, but nowhere near enough is done with them. The characters are very one-dimensional, and despite Dulleas' performance any empathy towards his character's plight was rarely on this viewer's mind.

All in all, a very odd film that had potential but executes it pretty badly. 4/10 Bethany Cox
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A well-intentioned whoops
ivanproton20 February 2004
The untouchable Jack Palance leads a pack of virtual reality cowboys in this shameless high-concept ripoff of Yul Brynner's WESTWORLD. Several amnesiacs awaken in a dusty old west town, where they are immediately forced into slavery. Their only hope of social advancement is to murder other denizens of Blood City, gaining all-important street cred and working their way up to a face-off with the schizophrenic sheriff, valiantly played to the straight-faced hilt by Palance. The prematurely revealed would-be `twist' is that all the amnesiacs are actually in suspended animation, merely passing a computerized aptitude test in the technologically manufactured west, uh.world. And if you've rented BLOOD CITY in search of blood, there's not a drop to be seen. This constantly deflating film co-stars sci-fi veterans Keir (2001) Dullea and Barry (SPACE:1999) Morse, and was also released as WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY.
5 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Welcome to Bland City.
gridoon8 June 2002
A film with aspirations higher than its abilities. The vaguely interesting central idea is played out in a muddled script, and the whole production looks schlocky and amateurish. Dullea is a bland hero, Palance his usual eccentric self, Eggar gives a good performance....but what are these actors doing in such a cut-rate film anyway??? By the way, the videocassette version is very poorly framed, and the Panavision cinematography suffers BADLY. (*1/2)
5 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Welcome to Blood City, Where Nothing Interesting Happens...
brando64724 July 2016
I'm sure WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY sounded like a great idea on paper. It's part western, part science fiction, and the filmmakers managed to snag Jack Palance and Keir Dullea for the main roles. A meager budget may have been the reasons for the cheap sets and costuming, but it was poor writing that resulted in such a dull waste of time. It's unclear where and when this movie is set because it jumps right into the action, but I got the impression that it opens in Japan where our "hero" Lewis (Dullea) is taken by police. Things around him seem chaotic but it's never made clear why because once Lewis is taken we immediately cut to him awakening in the desert surrounded by a group of confused strangers. All of them are in blue jumpsuits, none of them have any memory of who they are (outside of their names), and they've each got a card in their breast pocket identifying them as killers. Understandably, they're all shaken and confused. Everyone except for Lewis, who treats these bizarre circumstances as a joke. He's completely unfazed by his mysterious arrival in the desert and takes every opportunity to crack wise, even when angry hillbillies have a shotgun in his face. When one of the new arrivals tries to intervene in the rape of Martine (Hollis McLaren, the only woman in the new arrivals) by one of the hillbillies, he's shot down in cold blood and Lewis, again, has to crack jokes.

That's our hero, everyone. Thoroughly unlikeable from the moment we meet him. The group is soon approached by Frendlander (Palance), who leads them into Blood City and explains the rules. New arrivals are slaves; they will be chosen by a member of the community and put in a year of service before being given the opportunity to join the town as a regular civilian. New arrivals that refuse to acquiesce are fair game to be murdered. There is a contingent of people in Blood City who wear black outfits with red crosses affixed to their chests. These people are straight killers who have risen above the regular folk through murder. The more people you kill, the higher your rank and the more power you hold over the town. Frendlander is the current record- holder with over 20 kills and he's basically the town's overseer. Honestly, the whole thing is sort of a confusing mess and I'm not entirely sure how the society in this town operates. How do civilians become black-suited killers? By killing them? There are still rules and laws to follow in Blood City but killing is all right in certain circumstances? I'm not 100% on the details. Regardless, Blood City isn't real. We discover early on that it's a computer simulation and everyone in town is wired in. It's some sort of government program designed to weed out the weak and pinpoint the most adept killers to be used in the real world as government assassins. I guess?

The project is overseen by two scientists, the only important one being Katherine (Samantha Eggar). Katherine is immediately keen on Lewis and wants to ensure he makes it through the program. She becomes straight-up infatuated with him, going so far as to insert herself into the simulation to assist him and…eventually…sleep with him. So, obviously this is the most unregulated government program ever. While she obsesses over Lewis, Lewis is obsessing over Martine. Martine being a pretty young woman, the entire town has its eyes on her. Everyone wants to claim Martine as their slave for obvious raping purposes. There is a surprising amount of rape and rape intention in this film, and it's all targeted at poor Martine. The risk of rampant rape is so bad that Frendlander decides to lock her away for her own safety until a citizen can claim her. Eventually, Frendlander decides he wants Martine all for himself and all the promise of a cool sci-fi/western is flushed away as it becomes a dull 90-minute "save the girl" tale. And it's very, very dull. It feels like nothing happens for long stretches of this movie. The beginning and ending are pretty interesting but everything else is a snooze. Combine the motionless plot with a bunch of characters you most certainly won't care about and WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY is an avoidable mess. I love a good slice of Z-grade cinema cheese but this movie makes every effort to keep it from becoming too much fun.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Great 70s Sci-Fi/Western
Score_The_Film1 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Despite it's lackluster production values and the fact that the copy I watched was a crappy pan & scan copy, I really enjoyed it.

THIS IS NOT A REMAKE OF WESTWORLD as some have suggested. Westworld dealt with a theme park robot that went loopy and tried to kill people. WTBC is about a scientific experiment that places innocent victims in a virtual reality to test their skills. If anything WTBC is closer to The Prisoner episode, "Living In Harmony" as Bishop-11 mentioned, than anything else.

Palance is a lot of fun, as usual, and HE'S having fun without over-doing it as he sometimes did in the 70s (plus he's not drunk). The rest of the cast does a fine job as well. For the most part I'm satisfied with the plot details that were given but I would have liked a little bit more. For example, in the beginning the "experiment subjects" have cards in their pockets labeling them murderers and how many people they killed. Now, unless those cards are only there to give the subjects a tiny bit of info as to who they are and maybe why they are there, I'd like to know more about their purpose. However, I really like that the film makers don't hold your hand and spoon feed you the information, allowing you to think for yourself. I guess I can't have my cake and eat it, too.

Roy Budd turns in a good score, too, except I can do without the musical saw that showed up from time to time. It's threatening where it needs to be and there are times where the film could have used more music instead of some scenes sitting there flat without any at all.

I've been going through a 70's Sci-Fi kick recently, searching out films I hadn't seen before. This one was a pleasant surprise. Yeah, it has pacing issues but it's got a great concept and it's a film that really relies on the story, not the effects. And that's a nice change of pace compared to what we've been given for the past 20 years.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
"Why does everything come down to murder"?
lost-in-limbo12 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
A group of strangers wake up to find themselves in an unknown place with little recollection of how they got there and of their previous lives. They come across Sheriff Friedlander (Jack Palance), who takes them to a town called "Blood City". It's like they're back in the Wild West, but with a strange law system and social order involving a slave society and where murder is encouraged. But something is not quite right, as unknowingly for these people they are part of an experiment / reality game from outside forces who can manipulate the situations.

Originality can only go so far, if your execution isn't up to par. That's the story for the Sci-fi outing "Welcome to Blood City". Its ambitious quality in its ideas shows, but it's poorly staged. Low budget eats away and so does its limitations. While the technical side won't set the world alight with Peter Sasdy's steadfast direction, but I can't just fault that as the material is somewhat hodgepodge too. What starts off is intriguing, only goes onto become inconsistent and muddled as the more we learn about the predicament the characters find themselves in, the less involving it gets. The problem here is that it gives away the reveal too early, and when we find out about the experiment it seems to be incoherent in its narrative developments. The question why, is asked a lot. Rules just seem to be thrown about, the reasoning is that's the way of life and motivations become hazy of what's really going on behind the scenes with a real lack of elaboration on the bigger picture that becomes silly. The writers probably became lost with all the possibilities being churned out.

The complex concept behind the film does offer some sinister and nightmarish strokes, but it lacks the visual flair to complement it. Looking quite makeshift. Still it does have a brutal and ruthless edge to some scenes, but the excitement/suspense levels never rises, sometimes the pacing being bogged down and the climax finishes off on a anticlimactic and baffling note (if humorous with a final chase involving Palance doing his best woody the woodpecker impersonation). In the same way the flimsy ending does leave you dumbfounded.

Keir Dullea is likable enough in the lead and Jack Palance is always a treat with that devilish smile. It's a cunning performance. The interplay between Palance and Dullea's characters is for most part amusing. Samantha Eggar gives a good turn playing two roles; one in the game and that of a scientist behind scenes who gets a little too involved in her programming work.

So in the end it's disappointing in what it could have been, as there's an interesting, if strange set-up and the beginning builds that up, but alas it doesn't come together. Still there's something admirable about it.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"This is Blood City, and we do things a little different around here."
classicsoncall10 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The opening of the story is a little disorienting, you have a city traffic scene and for a while, I was getting upset that the movie I was watching wasn't the one featured on the DVD sleeve. But then the opening credits offered the title I was expecting, so it was with an 'OK', this could be interesting, that the rest of the picture unfolded. Though nominally a Western, what you have here is an early sci-fi experiment in the concept of virtual reality with an 1880's back drop. The premise of 'Blood City' itself, the Project as it were, was to choose a leader for an elite corps of killers in the real world. By weeding out the losers, project designers attempted to identify someone who could lead a military unit to victory based on their ability to make rational decisions in stressful situations, as well as survive the ordeal. What surprises me is that the concept was tackled in film way back in 1977, thirty years ago, yet the timing only a couple short years after the end of the Vietnam War suggests that the search for ways of insuring victory in future conflicts was well under way.

So much for theorizing. Except for the poor production values of the picture itself, I found the whole premise fairly fascinating. As the story progressed, the cut aways to the lab began to make more and more sense, particularly when Samantha Eggar's character began interjecting her own values into the game to affect the outcome. It would have been interesting to learn what became of the people who were 'killed' in Blood City, the story didn't take it that far. As for Lewis's (Keir Dullea) decision to return after being terminated, the film allows for a quandary. Apparently, subjects chosen at random for the experiment didn't have recourse for a return to their former life, even if they could remember it. Of course, we don't get to see what happens when the machines are turned off.

One thing I was left wondering about was why the identity cards with the murder scores on the new arrivals was introduced in the first place. That idea didn't seem to have any bearing on the story that followed, even if it helped set up the plot. Was it the point to establish the remaining kills needed to achieve 'immortality'? If so, that idea was negated by the fact that new arrivals could attain immediate citizenship with their first kill. Anyone?

I guess the reason I enjoyed the film as much as I did was because of it's way of asking more questions than it answers. Whenever I try to wrap my brain around the concept of virtual reality, a la "The Matrix" for example, it starts to make my head hurt. I don't even want to think about living there like Lewis.

Hey, check this out - watch the scene where the camera cuts away from the dead Maxine for the last time - if you look real close, you'll see she opens her eye!
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A near-miss, intriguingly plotted but rather flatly handled.
barnabyrudge12 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
An initial look at the storyline of Welcome To Blood City screams :'Westworld rip-off!' As it happens, it's not really much like Westworld at all. Welcome To Blood City has a few good ideas and a decent score by Roy Budd, but is rather hampered by lacklustre handling.

A number of strangers, all suffering some form of amnesia, wake up in a barren desert wasteland. They cannot remember how they got there or where they came from, but in their pockets they carry an unusual card which tells them how many people they have killed (even though, as far as they're aware, they have never killed anyone in their lives). The bewildered group start hiking in search of food, water and shelter. Soon they find themselves in Blood City, a violent town which seems to be based on an alternate wild west. The leader/sheriff of the town, Frendlander (Jack Palance) explains to them that, as newcomers, they can either choose to become slaves for one year (if they choose this, they will be protected from being killed) or they can refuse to become slaves and go it alone (this is a much riskier choice, as they will be fair game to be killed by another citizen). It turns out that Blood City has its own complicated laws and rules, with credits awarded for fair-fight killings, and immortality awarded to anyone who can successfully carry out twenty fair killings. One of the newcomers, Lewis (Keir Dullea) is determined to fight the system, and sets about striking back his own way. Meanwhile, it is made clear to us, the audience (though not to the inhabitants of Blood City) that the entire thing is an artificial reality – a game, almost – in which various people are being tested for their mental and physical resolve under dangerous circumstances, so that the best ones can be employed as government agents and assassins back in the modern world.

Certainly weird, Welcome To Blood City unfortunately fails to be similarly wonderful. It's a near-miss more than anything else, a good idea which doesn't quite make the transition into a good full-length film. The concept of a virtual reality scenario in which human guinea pigs are put unknowingly through a dangerous game is quite intriguing, and there are interesting moments throughout the film. Dullea is OK as the 'hero' and Palance does his usual shifty-eyed, furtive, twitchy turn as the sinister sheriff. Samantha Eggar is rather wasted in a dual role as one of the citizens of Blood City and a laboratory technician in the 'real' world overseeing the experiment. The promising plot doesn't really develop into anything unfortunately – it's an idea that never really gets beyond the 'idea' stage. The resulting film that stems from it doesn't reach the heights of cleverness, thoughtfulness or excitement that one might have hoped for. Worth a look for its intriguing possibilities, but ultimately Welcome To Blood City is a bit of a disappointment.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Interesting low-budget 70's sci-fi oddity
Woodyanders27 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A group of people suffering from amnesia find themselves as slaves in a savage Old West town that's really a virtual reality program designed to test how ruthless they all are. To get ahead in Blood City, one has to kill others. However, willful and sarcastic new arrival Lewis (a fine and likable performance by Kier Dullea) refuses to adhere to the rules. Director Peter Sasdy, working from an offbeat and intriguing script by Michael Winder and Stephen Schneck, relates the compelling story at a steady pace, presents a chilling portrait of a harsh world where random violence and brutality reigns supreme, and stages the shoot-outs with real flair. The sound acting by the able cast keeps the picture buzzing: Jack Palance has a villainous ball as fearsome local lawman Freedlander, Samanthan Eggar likewise does well as sultry and manipulative scientist Katherine, plus there are sturdy contributions from Hollis McLaren as the sweet and fetching Martine, Barry Morse as the stern project supervisor, Chris Wiggins as the vile Gellor, Henry Ramer as amiable bodyguard Chumley, Allan Royal as the pragmatic Peter, and John Evans as nerdy technician Lyle. Moreover, the nifty premise predates "The Matrix" with its concept of a computer-generated alternate reality, there's a genuine weirdness to the film that makes it engrossing throughout, and the filmmakers leave a good deal of the plot for the viewers to figure out on their own (for example, we never find out who exactly is behind the virtual reality program). Roy Budd's strong dramatic score rates as another major asset. Worth a watch.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I'm the only gay I mean gunslinger in this village
Bezenby30 December 2016
You know what this film reminded me of? The Cabin in the Woods. If you've seen that, you'll know what I mean when the film totally takes you out of the 'moment' and twists things up a bit.

Keir Dullea wakes up somewhere with no memory except a card in his pocket that tells him how many people he's killed. Not that he reads it mind. His other buddies at the time do, but by the time the plot gets going most of them are dead.

He finds himself in some sort of Cowboy world where life is cheap and terrible clothes are even cheaper, but who can he trust? Probably not Jack Palance. And is this world even trustworthy anyway? It's a very early take on Virtual Reality, this one. But then it's another film where you shouldn't really reveal much of the plot, because that's where the enjoyment lies. P'ting
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
"If I were you, I'd turn back."
mark.waltz7 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
To paraphrase that sign from "The Wizard of Oz", turning back is a good idea. This is a weird futuristic science fiction Western, much like many other films of the 70's but crudely done and tough to watch. If you make it through the first 20 minutes, you're probably going to make it all the way, but if you entered into a 90-minute world of crudeness and violence and vile characters you have no interest in spending time with, then it's a good idea to just give up. I can understand Jack Palance in this. It seems that he took everything that was offered to him in the 1970s, haven't had a slouch during that decade up until the time of "City Slickers". But Kier Dullea and Samantha Eggar must have had a lack of decent offers at the time to and needed to pay the rent because there's not one thing worthwhile in this film to waste their talents.

A bunch of characters are seen sitting together in the middle of nowhere as the film opens, and you're wondering how they got there and why they are there in the first place. It turns out that they all killed someone and are now being assigned to individuals to be slaves for a year, at which time they can enter that society as legitimate citizen. Once they get settled in, it becomes a desperate attempt to survive, because the people that they assigned to are horrible to them. I saw nothing worthwhile in this film because every element of it was just disgusting and trashy, and I give it above a bomb simply because of the presence of the three lead actors.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
MATRIX PLUS WEST WORLD
nogodnomasters25 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
A group of people dressed as slaves find themselves suddenly transferred to an old west town with no memory of who they are. They have cards which claim they are killers. They are captured and placed in scenarios where they must kill to survive. Killing is done under rules. Michael Lewis ( Keir Dullea ) is the main character. He emerges from the group and the controllers of the game take a special interest in him.

Mean while the real body of Michael Lewis is laying down and is wired up. Considering that movies have come out with similar themes, better effects, and better scripts, I wouldn't waste a lot of money on this one. It is available on poorly transferred DVD sci-fi collections.

Parental Guide: No f-bombs or nudity. One quick on screen love scene and one off screen rape.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Some flawed storytelling here, but the concept's interesting
Leofwine_draca3 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This is an interesting but flawed attempt at producing a sci-fi western hybrid in the form of WESTWORLD. In this case, the western scenario is actually a virtual reality plot designed to work out the survival of the fittest, thus discovering who the best killer is. In this "game", points are awarded for making a kill, so life is cheap as you would imagine. However, there are certain rules which must be obeyed at all costs. Sadly, WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY is spoiled by a confusing plot which remains irritatingly ambiguous as to what the heck is going on in the real world. We never learn who the subjects really are, or why they have been selected; instead we see glimpses of them in their past lives which don't really help. Similarly, the actions of Jack Palance - initially appearing to be a good guy - are never explained at the end.

Although it doesn't have anything in the way of shocks or surprises, this film does have some fun with the clichéd western shoot-outs and gun battles, which are kept lively and fun. Director Peter Sasdy injects certain scenes with style and power, and its just a shame that the film can't follow this through as a whole. Although it was a UK financed-production, this was shot in Canada (just like THE HAUNTING OF JULIA and THE UNCANNY from the same period). The Canadian locations are pretty but unconvincing for a western town.

The acting is pretty good, with even the poorest performers still being above average. Palance is great as the friendly Friedlander, and seems to be having a ball as in most of his films. Keir Dullea is a charismatic and tough hero, while familiar faces such as that of Barry Morse pad out the cast. I'll make it clear that I've never really liked THE BROOD's Samantha Eggar, and here she plays a duel role of an occupant of the town and a scientist guiding the events. Bad news for me, I thought, but thankfully she's not too irritating this time around.

Although WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY lacks the exploitational ingredient of violence to make it enjoyable, I found the whole idea of the game to be an interesting one, and the film kept me watching throughout without ever becoming boring. It just would have been nice if some of the actions and story behind the plot had been explained in greater detail. In all, though, not a bad attempt and worth a watch for fans.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Interesting but not entirely successful sci-fi/western hybrid
Red-Barracuda14 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Welcome to Blood City in some ways is a sister film to Westworld, both movies were that most specific sub-genre – the western/sci-fi hybrid. This combination allowed for the iconography and characteristics of both genres to be played up and for the films to derive strength from the amalgamation. It would only be fair to say that Westworld is the clearly more successful film though. It has a clearer purpose and is directed much better. In the case of Welcome to Blood City, on the other hand, the ideas are better than the execution. The story begins with a group of people waking up in a remote area with no memory of how they got there, soon they are captured and taken to a wild western town where social status is afforded to individuals based on the number of kills they amass. It's soon revealed that nothing is as it seems and these people are guinea pigs in some virtual reality scientific experiment used to test subjects on their reactions and skills - the ultimate aim of the game is to identify who are the potential leaders and killers who can be utilised by the government for military purposes.

It seems a little bit of a questionable decision for the film to reveal this twist so early on. You can't help think that the tension and intrigue would be increased considerably if this had been revealed much later on, letting us get more involved with the western story strand. Overall, the ways the ideas are presented aren't generally fantastic and, like I said, the ideas are better than the way they are delivered on screen. All this said though, I still like the fact that this movie is trying for something different. The idea of virtual reality was quite original back in the 70's and I do like the genre mash-up between sci-fi and western. It also benefits from a decent cast, with 2001: A Space Odyssey's Keir Dullea in the lead and Jack Palance and Samantha Eggar offering good support. On a different note, I saw this on a public domain copy which had really bad pan and scan; and by really bad I mean terrible, not only were the sides cut off but the top of the frame was as well. This seems to be a common copy that many people see – the film would have certainly been improved to some extent by a more acceptable print.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I found this by accident and loved it
BandSAboutMovies19 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Sometimes, I just sit and search through YouTube looking for a movie to watch while I work. Often, that search finds horrible films that I wouldn't be able to enjoy if I were truly paying attention to them. And sometimes, like with this movie, I end up taking a break from writing and find something I really enjoy.

Directed by Peter Sasdy (The Lonely Lady, Taste the Blood of Dracula, Hands of the Ripper), this film was a UK/Canadian tax shelter affair. But don't hold that against it! Five strangers all wake up at the same time and have no memories of who they are, other than that they are all killers. They must travel to a Wild West town called Blood City.

Once there, they will spend a year in servitude before they can become free. Then, they'll be able to own a business and work toward becoming immortal - free from constant worry of challenges to the death. They get there by winning twenty challenges. And there's only one law in Blood City - Frendlander, played by Jack Palance. It's no accident that the bad guy from Shane is playing this part. Palance might only be known to younger folks from his Oscar turn in City Slickers, but in the 1970's he was taking whatever parts he could get. And then he'd sink his teeth into them! He's fabulous in this movie!

Keir Dullea (Black Christmas, 2001, The Haunting of Julia) stars as Lewis, who finds himself coming up against Frendlander over and over again. The real secret of the film? None of them are in this town at all - it's a virtual reality simulation to determine the best warriors in a future war. So basically, it's a combination of WestWorld and The Matrix.

Samanta Eggar (The Brood) shows up as a scientist who falls in love with Lewis and inserts herself into the virtual reality experiment. Barry Morse is also in here, who you may remember as Lt. Philip Gerard from TV's The Fugitive. And Chris Wiggins is in this as well. He was Jack Marshak on Friday the 13th: The Series.

If you're looking for this movie, you can find a horrible transfer of it on the Mill Creek Sci-Fi Invasion 50 Pack. That said, the set is pretty worthwhile, as you also get stuff like The Crater Lake Monster, Death Machines, Sergio Martino's Hands of Steel, Horror High, the Florinda Bolkan film Le Orme, The Raiders of Atlantis, R.O.T.O.R., Robo Vampire, one of the worst/best films ever Rocket Attack U.S.A. and more.

This is totally of the doomed 1970's genre and the end - where Lewis chooses the fantasy of Blood City instead of the lies of modern life - still ring true today. I completely expected a ripoff of WestWorld and FutureWorld, yet was rewarded with something really good. It's slow moving, but if you understand that and can see a movie for what it could be versus what it is, I think you'll enjoy it.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Back then in the 70s it was a must
avraham_tal20 March 2017
I first watched this film with my neighbors about 40 years ago. We took this at the only video rental in town back then.

To me, as a 10 year old, this film was always a mystery. I looked it up again a while ago to understand it better, and glad I found it.

I wanted to review the sociological metaphors and moral again, now that I am getting close to 50.

Of course, the acting, directing, and other effects are nothing like we find today, but back then it was a sure 10.

Some ideas in this film are still unique, even today.

This movie did not leave my mind for 40 years...
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
I Like The Film - Is That Against The Law?
Rainey-Dawn11 November 2016
This is a film you would have to watch to get a full grasp of just how odd it is. The plot summary is about a group of people that find themselves stranded on an island each with a card that says they've committed murder. None of them have a memory of murder, how they came to be on the island nor their own lives before. The town sheriff, Frendlander, comes along to bring those new arrivals to the island a place called Blood City - where it's kill or be killed. The citizens of Blood City make rank by killing within the law.

Jack Palance is aces as usual. He plays Frendlander the "sheriff" and owner of Blood City - one tough cookie here that doesn't want trouble in his town, he just wants everyone to abide by the law.

I really enjoyed this film and I hope that is "within the law" of this very odd but good movie for me to do so Mr. Frendlander.

8/10
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A Very Different Western...
azathothpwiggins23 September 2021
Michael (Keir Dullea) wakes up in an unknown landscape with four strangers. After a short introduction, they begin walking, only to be attacked by brigands leading to tragedy and death.

Enter the mysterious man in black, Sheriff Friendlander (Jack Palance), who leads the survivors to a small "western" town populated by "cowboy"-types. Michael and company soon learn that their situation is dire and that something beyond their comprehension is behind it all.

WELCOME TO BLOOD CITY is a sci-fi-thriller that's sort of like a cross between WESTWORLD and a bizarre TWILIGHT ZONE or OUTER LIMITS episode. Palance and Dullea are great in their roles, as is Samantha Eggar as a technician...
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Ambitious sci-fi western
searchanddestroy-14 November 2023
Some folks say that's there the best movie from director Peter Sasby, who worked for Hammer films in the seventies. This is an ambitious feature, no doubt, and Sasby shows here another face of his career. Many folks too could compare this with WESTWORLD, and I understand why, because myself thought about the Michael Crichton's film where Yul Brynner had more or less the Jack Palance's place; however both plots are quite different, just the overall atmosphere, scheme and settings are rather close. Good cast too. The problem is that I saw the film in an awful pan f...scan frame instead its genuine original LBX. That upsets me very much.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed