Logan's Run at 50: Sci-Fi Movie Tackled Overpopulation, Sustainability
As Logan and Jessica, Michael York and Jenny Agutter go on the lam.
Courtesy Everett Collection
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Fifty years after the science fiction film’s release, environmental themes tackled in Logan’s Run have helped the movie extend its cultural lifespan.
Director Michael Anderson’s dystopian feature was based on authors William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson’s 1967 novel that MGM had tried unsuccessfully for years to adapt for the big screen. Set in the 23rd century, the film centers on a hedonistic society where the remaining humans live in a domed, AI-run city; a crystal lodged in each resident’s left hand blinks from red to black when they turn 30, at which point they are killed through a ritual called “Carousel.”
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Michael York, known for films like Cabaret, starred as Logan 5, a police officer who tracks down “runners” for refusing to participate in Carousel — until he, too, finds himself marked for termination. Jenny Agutter and Richard Jordan rounded out the cast. After other screenwriters took a crack at it, David Zelag Goodman’s script finally helped move the adaptation out of development hell thanks to upping the maximum age from 21 in the book, thus expanding the pool of potential stars, including then-34-year-old York.
The star, who bonded with Anderson on their 1975 film Conduct Unbecoming, saw a pre-fame Farrah Fawcett playing tennis at a friend’s home and suggested her for a small role in Logan’s Run. “I’m responsible for her whole wonderful career,” York jokes to THR about the actress, whose series Charlie’s Angels would make her a household name when it premiered in the fall of 1976.
United Artists released Logan’s Run on June 23, 1976, and it collected a pleasing $25 million ($145 million today). THR’s review noted that the movie “has little freshness or originality to offer” but added that “York displays a great deal of energy and screen presence.”
Not only did the movie spawn a short-lived spinoff series on CBS, but a potential remake from producer Joel Silver had been in development over the decades, attaching such directors as Joseph Kosinski, Nicolas Winding Refn and Simon Kinberg. In 1999, Anderson called Logan’s Run “a piece that I’m very proud of.”
York imagines that a new take on Logan’s Run could find success — the 84-year-old actor quips, “Of course, I’m way too old for it” — and he still appreciates his version’s prescient narrative: “The themes about sustainability have become very important.”
This story appears in The Hollywood Reporter’s 2026 Sustainability Issue. Click here to read more.
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