Short Circuit Movie Review
Short Circuit Review
"Short Circuit" Overview

Rating: PG
1986
Cast and Crew
Director : John BadhamProducer : Gregg Champion,David Foster,Lawrence Turman
Screenwiter : Brent Maddock,S.S. Wilson
Starring : Ally Sheedy,Steve Guttenberg,Fisher Stevens,Austin Pendleton,G.W. Bailey,Brian McNamara,Tim Blaney
I am sure that, back in the mid-1980s, I wasn't alone in believing that we were just
a lightning strike away from a robot becoming sentient. I probably wasn't alone in
believing Fisher Stevens was a native-born Indian, too, but that's another matter.
You can thank Short Circuit for all of this. Massively successful and influential in its
era, it's a story of an evil military corporation vs. one man. Or rather, one robot
who thinks he's a man: The now-infamous Number 5.
Director John Badham had directed WarGames a couple of years earlier, and he seems
to have wanted to turn again to the question of when computers would become thinking,
feeling, autonomous beings. It was a hot topic of the era, as the personal computer
was becoming commonplace and processing power was increasing at an unheard-of rate. (Movies
like The Terminator, which offered a horrifying doomsday scenario, only increased the conversation.)
Little did we realize that, 20 years later, "sentient" computers would still be too
far off to even predict.
But lightning, well, that's a different issue. Here, a cold, murderous killing machine
gets fried and turns nice. Not only does his voice change into a hipster lilt (Tim
Blaney will always be Number 5 to me), he becomes obsessed with learning ("Input!")
and deathly afraid of being taken apart ("No disassemble!") Number 5 is accidentally
loosed from the Pacific Northwest compound where he was built and quickly lands in
the home of Stephanie (Ally Sheedy) a caterer with a small animal farm on her property. Ch
asing after Number 5 are his creators, the droll Newton (Steve Guttenberg) and the
awesomely stereotypical Ben (Stevens).
Amazingly, Newton can build and program a robot by himself but can't drive car and has only
rudimentary language skills. Ben seems completely and equally incompetent, which
is probably why the real bad guys, military might manned by the inimitable G.W. Bailey
(famous from the Police Academy series), manage to get closer and closer to Number 5, with
every intent to blow him into oblivion. (They have a point: His weapons are still
armed and he knows how to use them.)
But Stephanie convinces Newton that Number 5 is alive, and in one heartfelt scene
in the desert, Number 5 proves it. The movie hits rock bottom when Newton concludes
that Number 5 is indeed alive because he laughs... at a joke about "a priest, a minister,
and a rabbi."
As much as my younger siblings loved this movie, looking back at it today it's clear
that Short Circuit is absolutely awful, and not just because of Ally Sheedy's haircut. The
dialogue is downright awful and the entire scenario is laughable. I can't imagine
what a real response to an escaped military robot might be, but I doubt it would
much resemble two idiots driving aimlessly around town in a modified ice cream truck.
Number 5 proved endearing enough that he got his own sequel, which was a staple of
cable TV for many years. (The movie, which had "Johnny Five" running wild in the
city with Ben by his side, made half what the original did.) But give ol' Number
5 a little credit for spawning a mini-genre of robot-themed comedies, many with the "But
is it human?" theme to explore. On second thought, considering the overall quality
of those films, maybe that's not something to be proud of.
The DVD includes a commentary track, a making-of featurette, and lots of minor ephemera.
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Review by Christopher Null
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