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Able Edwards (2004)

Able Edwards (2004)
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A handful of businessmen face the question of who is real and who is not as they look back on the life, death, and second life of an iconic American in this satiric comedy drama. In the future, after a variety of disasters have decimated the Earth, the world's population has been relocated to a number of huge satellites, and several large corporations have the fate of the survivors in a stranglehold; however, the once powerful Edwards Corporation, founded by beloved entertainment mogul Abel 'Able' Edwards (Scott Kelly Galbreath), has fallen on hard times, and the leaders of the company feel they need to give their robotics business a jump start. With this in mind, they take the unusual step of cloning a new version of the long-deceased Abel Edwards to serve as the firm's new figurehead. Their plan backfires, however, when the replacement Edwards turns out to have different ideas about what's best for the company than the board of directors, as he attempts to move the company away from robotics and virtual reality back into the theme parks and tangible entertainment experiences that were the stuff of his predecessor's glory days. So who is in control -- the clone or the people who created the clone? Able Edwards was shot on digital video using green-screen techniques which allowed the movie to be shot without any standing sets; backgrounds and special effects were created digitally and added to the images after the fact. Steven Soderbergh served as executive producer for the project. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Scott Kelly GalbreathSteve Beaumont Jones, (more)
Director(s):
Graham Robertson
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Able Edwards

A handful of businessmen face the question of who is real and who is not as they look back on the life, death, and second life of an iconic American in this satiric comedy drama. In the future, after a variety of disasters have decimated the Earth, the world's population has been relocated to a number of huge satellites, and several large corporations have the fate of the survivors in a stranglehold; however, the once powerful Edwards Corporation, founded by beloved entertainment mogul Abel 'Able' Edwards (Scott Kelly Galbreath), has fallen on hard times, and the leaders of the company feel they need to give their robotics business a jump start. With this in mind, they take the unusual step of cloning a new version of the long-deceased Abel Edwards to serve as the firm's new figurehead. Their plan backfires, however, when the replacement Edwards turns out to have different ideas about what's best for the company than the board of directors, as he attempts to move the company away from robotics and virtual reality back into the theme parks and tangible entertainment experiences that were the stuff of his predecessor's glory days. So who is in control -- the clone or the people who created the clone? Able Edwards was shot on digital video using green-screen techniques which allowed the movie to be shot without any standing sets; backgrounds and special effects were created digitally and added to the images after the fact. Steven Soderbergh served as executive producer for the project. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
85 mins

Complete Cast of Able Edwards


Director(s):
Graham Robertson
Producer(s):
Scott Bailey
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    Member Reviews
     
    Dana C.

    I stumbled across this gem among my recommendations. The premise interested me as a fan of post-apocalyptic stories. What I got was a visually intriguing film in the vein of old science fiction, Citizen Kane, Sky Captain, and AI, combined with a very original plot. The lighting and backgrounds are very cool to look at and the characters compelling. But this is no abstract, 2001-ish film; the parallels with real life (Able is the Walt Disney of his world) and real issues move this story along at a brisk pace. There are a few awkward moments (actors pretending to walk in place look like they're doing some kind of weird rolling-shoulders dance) but it all seemed to add to the retro, almost newsreel feel of the film. I rented this without reading about how it was made so I didn't have any preconceived ideas, and it's better that way. Great story and a milestone in digital filmmaking.

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    Michael D.

    This feature was shot ala' "Sky Captain and the World of Tommorow" with expansive imaginative settings that remind me of H.G. Wells "Things To Come" . I enjoyed the viewpoint of the story and the parallels with real history. Overall clever and enjoyable albiet low budget.

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