Z.P.G.

Z.P.G.

197297 min
β˜…6.1/10
Science FictionThriller

Plot Summary

In the not too distant future, an overpopulated Earth government makes it illegal to have children for a generation. One couple, unsatisfied with their substitute robot baby, breaks the rules.

▢️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

πŸ‘₯Cast (33)

Oliver Reed

Oliver Reed

Russ

Geraldine Chaplin

Geraldine Chaplin

Carol

Don Gordon

Don Gordon

George

Diane Cilento

Diane Cilento

Edna

No Image

David Markham

Dr. Herrick

Bill Nagy

Bill Nagy

The President

Sheila Reid

Sheila Reid

Mary Herrick

Aubrey Woods

Aubrey Woods

Dr. Mallory

No Image

Wayne Rodda

Metromart Salesman

No Image

Ditte Maria Wiberg

Telescreen Operator

Birgitte Federspiel

Birgitte Federspiel

Psychiatrist

Lone Lindorff

Lone Lindorff

Mother

🎬Crew

Director

Michael Campus

Writers

Max Ehrlich, Frank De Felitta

Producers

Tom Madigan, Frank De Felitta

πŸ–ΌοΈGallery (1 images)

Z.P.G. backdrop 1

🏷️Keywords

pollutionpregnancydystopiaoverpopulationdistant futurerobotbirth control

πŸ’¬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

5/28/2023

Our planet is over-populated so the government introduces a strict no offspring policy. We must all make do with robot babies - anyone caught trying to have a real child gets shot! "Russ" (Oliver Reed) and "Carol" (Geraldine Chaplin) are determined to have a child, though, and the feature follows their escapades as they try to conceive and to keep their baby and themselves from the pervasive eyes and ears of the State. The concept is quite original, and it obviously spawned quite a few sequels (not least "Logan's Run" in 1976), but the execution and production really do let this down. Diane Cilento was a stunning woman to look at, but here, as was frequently the case, her acting - especially about something quite so visceral - lacks emotion or passion, indeed a robot baby might just have suited her character quite well. There's a decent amount of jeopardy as they try to escape with their bairn, and the socio-political criticism of a society that has lost any semblance of free will is writ large, but the whole thing is listless and, frankly, Reed is not the least convincing either. Pity - had potential, just undelivered.

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Production Companies

Paramount Pictures