Scanners | 
| Director: David Cronenberg Actors: Jennifer O'neill, Stephen Lack, Patrick Mcgoohan, Lawrence Dane, Michael Ironside Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $3.10 You Save: $11.88 (79%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 80 reviews Sales Rank: 12063
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 103 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.1 x 0.6
MPN: 1002330 ISBN: 0792850688 UPC: 027616865496 EAN: 9780792850687 ASIN: B00005K3NY
Theatrical Release Date: January 14, 1981 Release Date: August 28, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential video David Cronenberg's 1981 horror film is a darkly paranoid story of a homeless man (Stephen Lack) mistakenly believed to be insane, when in fact he can't turn off the sound of other people's thoughts in his telepathic mind. Helped by a doctor (Patrick McGoohan) and enlisted in a program of "scanners"--telepaths who also can will heads to explode--he becomes involved in a battle against nefarious forces. A number of critics consider this to be Cronenberg's first great film, and indeed it has a serious vision of destiny that rivals some of the important German expressionist works from the silent cinema. Lack is very good as the odd hero, and McGoohan is effectively eccentric and chilly as the scientist who saves him from the street, only to thrust him into a terrible struggle. --Tom Keogh
Product Description Welcome to the world of the Scanners -- a race of humans with telekinetic powers that can wreak havoc beyond your most dreaded nightmare. Writer/director David Cronenberg (The Fly Naked Lunch) brings the terror closer than ever before he brings it right into your mind. Cronenberg is a modern-day horror master whose name fits in easily with the likes of King Craven and Carpenter...and Scanners with its spectacular and shockingly realistic special effects is a startling masterpiece of the genre. When a rogue Scanner of unparalleled power (Michael Ironside) wages a bloody war against the normals young empath Cameron Vale (Stephen Lack) is recruited to track him down. But Vale is inexperienced and a battle with another Scanner could mean a grisly death...or worse. Can Vale vanquish his insanely violent power-mad adversary? Only one thing is certain: Scanners delivers the chills-down-your-spine heart-in-your-throat you-can't-watch-but-you-daren't-leave goods (Time)!System Requirements: Running Time 103 MinFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: R UPC: 027616865496 Manufacturer No: 1002330
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| Customer Reviews: Read 75 more reviews...
I Honestly Expected More October 26, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
In my own personal experience, Scanners was one of those movies that everybody around you had seen and told you how great it was but you still hadn't gotten around to it. I did finally get around to watching the film and I have to be honest, I expected a lot more from my experience. It was good don't get me wrong, but personally from my enjoyment of classic cheesy 80s horror-esque type movies, this didn't fit the bill. The acting was wooden and the story quite boring, sure it's a film about people who can read minds, but when you have your main character, a man who didn't originally know he was a Scanner all of a sudden become the most powerful Scanner, I felt the whole thing was rushed.
The tag line for this movie was "There are 4 billion people on earth. 237 are Scanners. They have the most terrifying powers ever created... and they are winning." Sounds like a good premise for a movie no? It's a great idea that could have made a great movie and although Scanners had its moments I just found the whole thing boring. The main character Cameron Vale played by Stephen Lack wasn't as interesting as I think Cronenberg expected him to be. He had the creepy look about him and he could pull the serious Scanner face as if he was constipated and trying to push one out, but that was about the only thing he had going for him.
The bloody bits were quite cool and very graphic as they were in those days. The infamous head exploding scene in particular grabbed my attention and disturbed me a little. Michael Ironside who plays the apparently very evil underground Scanner lord Darryl Revok is one of the best parts of the film and comes across as quite intimidating at times.
The story of the film is relatively simple, as the tag line implies there are 237 Scanners in the world and they're winning. Winning what exactly? well that's the war against normal humanity I think, let's be honest if they can read minds and we can't that makes them the enemy. Well a weaponry company known as ConSec and they manage to recruit and 'convert' a very powerful Scanner known as Cameron Vale. Dr. Paul Ruth head of ConSec's Scanner section trains Vale and sends him to find and stop Revok, with some surprising results.
OK, the movie is a bit more complicated than that but my point still stands about it not being as good and as special as people would have you believe. It's not the worst film I've ever seen and there are genuinely entertaining parts, however, there were points in which I found the film quite tedius and a bit predictable. I would recommend this as it's a worthy waste of your time, but I would say to not expect much.
Heads Will Explode When The Scanners Come To Town October 17, 2008 The seventies gave birth to psychokinetic horror films such as the blockbusters "Carrie" and "The Fury." In 1980, David Cronenberg (director of such science fiction horror classics as "The Brood," "Rabid," and "The Fly") brought us "Scanners."
Scanners are humans who can read your thoughts and manipulate your actions. Most of them are emotionally dysfunctional because the multitude of thoughts that bombard them can produce insanity. Therefore, they live in isolation. The drug Ephemerol is used to block thoughts.
Cameron Vale (Stephen Lack) is a good scanner who must find and destroy an evil scanner, Darryl Revok (Michael Ironside). Revok is intent on creating a group of scanners that will rule the world. This plot will be repeated numerous times in future sequels and in such horror hits as the "Firestarter" series.
Cameron encounters many dangerous obstacles during his quest to locate his nemesis. There is much death and bloodshed. Beautiful Kim Obrist (Jennifer Oneill of Lucio Fulci's "The Psychic") is another scanner who befriends Cameron. Together, they make an adorable couple and you can't help but cheer them on in their dangerous quest.
Eerie music and wintry Canadian scenery provide an excellent background for this high tech chiller. The acting is superb, the plot is fast paced, and the ending is quite shocking. "Scanners" is a must see for fans of telekinetic horror.
Bad transfer September 19, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This movie appears to be a possible transfer from a vhs tape. The film is not clear and the color is terrible. Not much care was put in placing this movie on dvd. When there is a closeup of the cast speaking, their lips do not move with the words. I was very disappointed in the quality of this dvd. This movie is good and should have looked better on dvd. Two stars was given because it is a good movie. I have this movie on vhs, and could have saved my money by not buying the bad dvd. Save your money.
This may blow your mind... July 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This 1981 film by David Cronenberg is absolutely mind blowing, you have to see it to know what I'm talking about.
This movie is about people with telekinetic powers that are viewed by society as "freaks" but a potential power source by one company, Consec. These "freaks" are called scanners and have the ability to get into your mind and "scan" it. Scanners can use their ability for bad or good but sometimes have a hard time to control their ability. Dr. Ruth, a "psycho-pharmacist" who heads a research team for Consec (played by Patrick McGoohan)aids scanners with their abilities. Dr. Ruth tries to help one lone scanner Cameron Vale (artist Stephen Lack) to use his powers in a more positive way. Another scanner Darryl Revok uses his powers in evil ways and tries to convert Vale. This is where the action begins.
This little gem is listed as a horror film, but I found it more sci-fi than anything else. It may be dated with the clothing worn and is a low budget film, but do not let this stop you, for it is one good movie! It is definitely one for lovers of sci-fi, thrillers or horror not to miss.
I bought this when Amazon had a terrific deal on DVDs and I sure got my money's worth! Sometimes low budget films can pack a punch and this one does it, don't miss Scanners...
Pure Camp May 4, 2008 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is not a good movie by any stretch of the imagination. The performances are wooden, the dialogue painfully awkward and cheesy, and the plot is full of holes. However, I laughed almost the whole way through. It is just pure silliness, delicious camp. Not a great film, maybe, but certainly great entertainment!
On another note, I had to wonder if Cronenberg wrote this shortly after reading Alfred Bester's 'Demolished Man.' It's not really the same, but similar in enough ways to make me wonder.
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