- Max Headroom (character)
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Max Headroom Max Headroom character
Max HeadroomFirst appearance The Max Headroom Show Last appearance Ch.4 digital TV switch-over promos Portrayed by Matt Frewer Voiced by Matt Frewer Information Gender Male Max Headroom is a fictional British artificial intelligence, known for his wit and stuttering, distorted, electronically sampled voice. The character was created by George Stone,[1] Annabel Jankel, and Rocky Morton and portrayed by Matt Frewer. Max Headroom was featured in a music video programme, a feature film, a dramatic television series, television commercials and the song "Paranoimia" by the British pop act Art of Noise.
Contents
Appearances
Max Headroom and 20 Minutes into the Future
The Max Headroom Show was developed into the British television movie Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future which in turn became the pilot for a series which ran from 1987 to 1988. The first episode was presented in an extended edition to American audiences in 1986 on Cinemax. Though officially two seasons, only fourteen episodes were created, and only thirteen aired.
The background story provided for the Max Headroom character presents a dystopic look at a run-down near-future dominated by television and large corporations. Max Headroom was shown to have been created from the memories of Edison Carter. The character's name came from the last thing Carter saw during a vehicular accident that put him into a coma: A bar with a sign warning of low clearance, marked "MAX. HEADROOM: 2.3 M".
The original movie was rebroadcast on More4 on 21 October 2007 as part of the 25th birthday celebrations of Channel 4.
Shout! Factory released Max Headroom: The Complete Series on DVD in the United States and Canada on August 10, 2010.
Other appearances
Max became a minor celebrity outside the television series. He was the spokesman for New Coke (after the return of Coke Classic), delivering the slogan "Catch the wave!" (in his trademark staccato, stuttering playback as "Ca-ca-ca-ca-ca-catch the wave!"). In the UK, Max appeared in television commercials for Radio Rentals. He also hosted an interview show on the Cinemax cable channel, called The Original Max Talking Headroom Show.
In 1987, Frewer appeared as Max Headroom in a segment for Sesame Street. He recites the alphabet with selected commentary on some of the letters.[2]
An older-looking Max has been used in a campaign to inform UK households of the impending digital TV switchover.[3] As he is looked after by a caretaker, he moans about being with the other "relics," and then talks about digital TV. He says that Channel 4 is now suddenly "20 years into the future," making a subtle reference to 20 Minutes into the Future. His sense of humor remains intact.
Musical performance
Art of Noise featured an overdubbed Max on the song "Paranoimia".[4] Max was also featured on a single titled "Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You're a Lovely Guy)" released by Chrysalis Records.[5]
Max Headroom also showed up at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Video game
In 1986, Quicksilva released a Max Headroom game, which was sold in the UK for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum and Commodore 64. The game's plot was to protect Edison Carter from criminals armed with guns, whilst rescuing Max.
Production notes
Notwithstanding the publicity for the character, the real image of Max was not computer generated. Computing technology in the mid-1980s was not sufficiently advanced for a full-motion, voice-synced human head to be practical for a television series. Max's image was actually that of actor Matt Frewer in latex and foam prosthetic makeup with a fiberglass suit created by Peter Litten and John Humphreys of Coast to Coast Productions in the UK. This was then superimposed over a moving geometric background. Even the background was not actual computer graphics at first; it was hand-drawn cel animation like the "computer-generated" animations in the TV series Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Later in the US version, they were actually generated by a Commodore Amiga computer.
The series pilot won the BAFTA award for graphics.[6]
The rights to the Max Headroom character are currently held by All3Media.[3]
Signal intrusion event
Main article: Max Headroom broadcast signal intrusion incidentOn November 22, 1987, two Chicago television stations had their broadcast signals hijacked by an unknown person wearing a Max Headroom mask. The first attack took place for 25 seconds during the sportscast on the 9 O'Clock news on WGN-TV Channel 9 and two hours later around 11 o'clock on PBS affiliate WTTW Channel 11 for about 90 seconds during a broadcast of the Doctor Who episode "Horror of Fang Rock." The hacker mumbled nonsense during his interruptions, including the phrase "The Greatest World Newspaper nerds," a reference to WGN's call letters, standing for World's Greatest Newspaper. A homemade Max Headroom background rocked back and forth as he talked. The video ended with a pair of exposed buttocks being spanked with a flyswatter. The culprits were never identified.
In popular culture
- In the 1989 film Back to the Future Part II, in a scene set in the year 2015, the main character Marty visits a stylized 1980s-themed diner. The "waiters" are interactive electronic monitors showing the faces of Michael Jackson, Ronald Reagan and Ayatollah Khomeini, portrayed in a Max Headroom-like manner.
- The comic strip Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau had a character fashioned after Max Headroom named Ron Headrest. He was to be a temporary replacement for a vacationing or napping Ronald Reagan.
- The season 4 episode of Farscape, "John Quixote" featured the actor Ben Browder appearing as a Headroom-type version of his character, John Crichton.
- The Canadian rock band Sum 41 wrote a song called "Second Chance for Max Headroom" for their album Half Hour of Power.
- In the 1987 film Spaceballs, a parody of Max Headroom appears as the character Vinnie, henchman of mobster Pizza the Hutt. Vinnie also appears in 2008's Spaceballs: The Animated Series, but without Max Headroom's characteristic stutter.
- In the music video for Italian DJ Gigi D'Agostino's song "Another Way", the main character bears Max Headroom's appearance, stuttering and robotic motion.
- During the final season of the educational television series Square One Television, another parody of Max Headroom named FAX HEADFUL had his own segment. FAX's monologues typically involved statistics and estimation, such as his musing on population density, or average yearly doughnut consumption.
- Channel 8 of Sirius Radio, which features songs from the 1980s, will sometimes have a character called "Less Headroom" between songs. He is billed as Max's "younger, more sophisticated brother".
- Usher's video for OMG pays homage to him in the beginning scene.
- In the music video "Love you like a Love Song" Selena Gomez singer appears in Max Headroom-esque scenes.
References
- ^ The UK Sci-Fi TV Book Guide: Max Headroom: 20 Minutes Into the Future by Steve Roberts
- ^ Max Headroom on Muppet Wiki.
- ^ a b Channel 4 resurrects Max Headroom to promote digital channels | Media | guardian.co.uk
- ^ Movie.php - Film | Cinema | Theatre | Theater | Poster
- ^ Novelty Nook, The Eighties
- ^ http://www.bafta.org/awards-database.html?year=1985&category=Television&award=Graphics
External links
- Pictures of Frewer's transformation into Max
- Interview with Matt Frewer
- 1987 Max Headroom Pirating Incident - article and video
- Max to promote Digital TV - The Times Online
- Video of the Art of Noise featuring Max Headroom singing Paranoimia
- the Max Headroom project - Comprehensive Max Headroom information site
Categories:- Max Headroom
- Fictional artificial intelligences
- Fictional characters introduced in 1985
- Coca-Cola
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