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BrainWaves

BrainWaves (1982) Movie Poster
  •  USA  •    •  77m  •    •  Directed by: Ulli Lommel.  •  Starring: Keir Dullea, Suzanna Love, Vera Miles, Ryan Seitz, Percy Rodrigues, Paul Willson, Tony Curtis, Eve Brent, Nicholas Love, Corinne Wahl, Phillipe Carr, Roger Burgraff, Michael DeFrancisco.  •  Music by: Robert O. Ragland.
        During a brain transplantation a young woman gets the brain of a murder victim. First everything goes well, but after some time the new brain gets increasingly more control over the body. In a trance like state the woman takes revenge for the murder of the brain donor...

Trailers:

   Length:  Languages:  Subtitles:
 1:28
 
 

Review:

Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
Image from: BrainWaves (1982)
A young accident victim receives a "transplant" of deceased accident victim's brainwaves in an innovative new procedure. Before long she begins to experience flashes of the other woman's memory that indicate the death was more than an accident, and which identify the perpetrator.

The main problem with the film is that the plot is just too thin. The story is very straightforward, is predictable, and lacks any twists or surprises. It plays like an episode of television's "Quincy", or perhaps even "Murder She Wrote", but even those shows packed-in more twists and unexpected plot developments.

Certainly it appears a lot of footage was shot in all sorts of interesting San Francisco locations and we are treated to a constant repetition of these establishing shots throughout the movie. The camera-angles do look nice, but the heavy use of these travelogue sequences slow the film's pace down to a deadly level. There is also a lot of unnecessary character development; we learn all about the lead couple and their son and the grandmother but these details are all irrelevant to the plot. And Vera Miles' character of the grandmother (named Marion!) is utterly superfluous. She gets one good dialogue scene (though it is irrelevant to the plot) and basically provides background chit-chat in the various family scenes.

Many viewers may feel they need their brainwaves revived after sitting through this one.


Review by Rrrobert from the Internet Movie Database.