The Man from Earth actually has been done as a stage play. But I don't have a problem with a movie being done that way. Look at Twelve Angry Men. The film is basically the same as the stage play, with only a couple of scenes outside the jury room, the courtroom stuff at the beginning and the bit on the courthouse steps at the end. But it's still a classic movie. There's nothing wrong with a film that's just one big conversation exploring ideas and characters. No need to toss in flashbacks or special effects or anything.
People above have mentioned John Billingsley, Tony Todd, and Richard Riehle, but the film's lead, David Lee Smith, is also a Trek alumnus; he played Kes's forgettable love interest Zahir in Voyager: "Darkling."
Excerpting my review from my blog:
People above have mentioned John Billingsley, Tony Todd, and Richard Riehle, but the film's lead, David Lee Smith, is also a Trek alumnus; he played Kes's forgettable love interest Zahir in Voyager: "Darkling."
Excerpting my review from my blog:
The Man from Earth was Bixby’s final work before he died, literally completed on his deathbed and filmed posthumously, and ironically it’s a return to the same premise as “Requiem for Methuselah,” the story of an immortal man who has lived down through the ages, changing identities as he went. Although, in fact, he conceived this idea in the early ’60s, making it almost certainly the source for “Requiem.” Fittingly, the concept endured and went through multiple lives.
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It’s not a perfect movie. While most of the anthropology, history, religious scholarship, and the like underlying the story is pretty sound, there’s a glaring historical error early on when John claims that he sailed with Columbus and that people in that time actually believed the world was flat (a myth invented by Washington Irving and others centuries later as a way of ridiculing the traditional institutions of Europe and mythologizing Columbus as an Enlightenment hero). And the event toward the end that finally provides proof of John’s tale for at least one character is very coincidental and contrived, yet still affecting. But it’s great to see a science-fiction film that’s driven entirely by the exploration of ideas and characters rather than action and spectacle. And most of the 80-plus-minute conversation that makes up the film is quite engaging and far-reaching in its ideas.
The film even critiques some of Bixby’s assumptions in “Requiem for Methuselah,” for instance, refuting the notion that an immortal could be any more brilliant or educated than the contemporary state of the art in the world, because he’d have to gain new understandings along with them. And it dodges the notion that John is immune to death by violence, which actually feels implausible given that he’s lived more than twice as long as “Requiem”‘s Flint, and lived through times when death by violence, whether by predatory animals, invading hordes, or inquisitions, could be hard to avoid. (At first, I was almost hoping John could be interpreted as a younger Flint, but his life story was too different, and both Billingsley’s and Todd’s characters made references to Star Trek as a fictional entity.)
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Overall, the cast was reasonably good, particularly Tony Todd; it was interesting to see him playing a calm, easygoing, bookish professor, against his usual type. I found Billingsley a little too broad and comical, Riehle a little too strident, and lead actor Smith a little bland, though reasonably effective. Still, overall the ensemble did all right with the material.