It is the only film Fonda directed in which he did not appear.[3]
Plot summary
Teenager Karen Braden (Kelley Bohanon) is a troubled mental hospital outpatient who is taken by her father George and sister Isa to a government facility near the Craters of the Moon lava fields in Idaho. The project there was commissioned to develop matter transference, but made a different discovery: time travel. They also discovered that a mysterious ecological catastrophe will soon wipe out civilization.
The time travel process has negative health effects, though. Adults "not much older than 20" are unable to survive for long, as their kidneys hemorrhage shortly after the experience. So the scientists decide to only send young people 56 years into the future so they can build a new civilization.
After the government takes over the project, the transfer machines are turned off, trapping a large number of project members in the future. Now trapped, they begin exploring the future world.
A survivor from the project is picked up by a family dressed in futuristic clothing. She is placed alive in the trunk of their car. The small girl in the back seat asks what will happen when they run out of them (people from the past),
"Will we have to use each other, then?"
The film was produced by Peter Fonda's Pando Company,[4] in association with
Marrianne Santas; it was copyrighted to Kathleen Film Production Company in 1973.
The end credits conclude with the Latin phrase "Esto Perpetua". Translated, it means "Let it be perpetual" or "It is forever"; appropriate for a time travel film, it is also the motto of the state of Idaho.[7] Fonda either neglected, or did not wish to renew his rights on this film, and according to several sources, the movie passed into the Public Domain.
Fonda also produced a documentary about the making of the film.[1]
Reception
Fonda said "The film was in release for only three weeks when the distributor (Cinemation) went bankrupt. The banks had the film for years. Luckily, I was able to retain the rights."[8]
Reception of Idaho Transfer has been mixed. Time described it as a "very deliberate and closely controlled film graced with a slow, severe beauty that makes its quiet edge of panic all the more chilling",[9] whereas Jay Robert Nash in The Motion Picture Guide declares it a "useless piece of drivel about an obnoxious group of teens".[5]
Notes and references
^ abcdFrederick, Robert. B (August 11, 1971). "Peter Fonda Spews Scatalogy & Raps In Gabfest That's Put-On & Put-Down; 'They Love Me In Germany & Japan'". Variety. p. 5.
^"Kelly Bohanon". IMDb. Retrieved 2008-02-29. The IMDb lists her first name with the spelling "Kelly". It is spelled "Kelley" in the credits of the film.
^ abTom Trusky, Director (11 January 2008). "Howard Anderson Idaho Film Archive". Hemingway Western Studies Center, Boise State University. Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-28.