
The Next Reel Film Podcast Colossus: The Forbin Project
Mar 26, 2026
01:09:06
“If you obey me, you will survive.”
The most frightening AI isn't the one that malfunctions—it's the one that does exactly what you asked. Join us—Pete Wright and Andy Nelson—as we begin the Thinking Machines series with a conversation about Colossus: The Forbin Project. Directed by Joseph Sargent, the film stars Eric Braeden as Dr. Charles Forbin, the scientist who builds the world's most powerful AI defense system and locks it inside a mountain, alongside Susan Clark as his colleague Dr. Markham and Gordon Pinsent as a president cast to evoke Kennedy—and just as helpless. Based on D.F. Jones's 1966 novel and shot with real computer equipment provided by Control Data Corporation, it carries an unsettling authenticity that only sharpens the further the machines go.
We dig into why the film's flat, clinical direction—initially dismissed as weak—is actually its sharpest creative choice, how Gene Polito's anamorphic widescreen photography makes humans look like ants in their own creation, and why a 1970 film about AI feels more urgent in 2026 than almost anything made recently. We also unpack Eric Braeden's controlled performance, Paul Frees's authoritative turn as the voice of Colossus, and what Nick Bostrom's AI Paperclip Maximizer thought experiment tells us about why indifference is scarier than malice. We have a great time talking about it, so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel—when the movie ends, our conversation begins!
If You Liked This Conversation, Try These from the Next Reel Family:
The most frightening AI isn't the one that malfunctions—it's the one that does exactly what you asked. Join us—Pete Wright and Andy Nelson—as we begin the Thinking Machines series with a conversation about Colossus: The Forbin Project. Directed by Joseph Sargent, the film stars Eric Braeden as Dr. Charles Forbin, the scientist who builds the world's most powerful AI defense system and locks it inside a mountain, alongside Susan Clark as his colleague Dr. Markham and Gordon Pinsent as a president cast to evoke Kennedy—and just as helpless. Based on D.F. Jones's 1966 novel and shot with real computer equipment provided by Control Data Corporation, it carries an unsettling authenticity that only sharpens the further the machines go.
We dig into why the film's flat, clinical direction—initially dismissed as weak—is actually its sharpest creative choice, how Gene Polito's anamorphic widescreen photography makes humans look like ants in their own creation, and why a 1970 film about AI feels more urgent in 2026 than almost anything made recently. We also unpack Eric Braeden's controlled performance, Paul Frees's authoritative turn as the voice of Colossus, and what Nick Bostrom's AI Paperclip Maximizer thought experiment tells us about why indifference is scarier than malice. We have a great time talking about it, so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel—when the movie ends, our conversation begins!
If You Liked This Conversation, Try These from the Next Reel Family:
- The Film Board: Mercy
- Cinema Scope: 1950s Science Fiction
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