Film Review
When he isn't on riot control, Thorn goes through the motions of
playing the detective, although, since corruption is so rife, his
efforts rarely amount to anything. His latest case, the murder of
a wealthy businessman named Simonson, intrigues him. Convinced
that Simonson was assassinated, Thorn enlists the aid of his friend Sol
and the dead man's woman, Shirl, to try to resolve the mystery.
It transpires that Simonson was on the board of directors of Soylent
and that shortly before he died he was showing signs of mental
distress.
Thorn's case ties in with Sol's own researches into Soylent's
mysterious operations. When the old man uncovers Soylent's
terrible secret, he is devastated. He checks into a voluntary
euthanasia centre and accepts death with equanimity. Thorn
arrives too late to save his friend and watches in horror as his body
is bundled into a disposal truck, along with hundreds of others.
Climbing aboard one of these trucks, Thorn accompanies the dead bodies
to their final destination - one of Soylent's processing plants.
The horrific truth suddenly dawns on Thorn...
It's a sobering thought that when
Soylent
Green was first seen in 1973 virtually no one had ever heard of
the greenhouse effect. Not many people seemed to be that bothered
by the population timebomb either, nor by the depletion of the world's
resources and the irreversible damage to the eco-system caused by
relentless industrialisation. Apart from a few sandal-wearing
hippies and the usual prophets of doom, mankind went on pretty well as
though the world and its resources were infinite. Only a few
academics with an understanding of epidemiology knew the truth, that
the party would have to end one day. Forty years on, it now
looks as if we have all but arrived at this fateful day.
Soylent Green can no longer be
considered science-fiction; it has become a statement of the
inevitable.
The collapse of any population after a period of unchecked expansion is
a basic characteristic of nature and, applied to humanity, it provided
the central theme for Harry Harrison's 1966 novel
Make Room! Make Room!, on which
Soylent Green is based. The
film adds another, even more chilling notion, namely that human
beings will ultimately be forced to resort to cannibalism as all other
species are driven to extinction. Today, this gruesome
dystopian vision of the future feels horribly near to hand, and the
question is no longer
"Is
this going to happen?
" but
rather "How long do we have left?" Much of the anguish the viewer
experiences when watching this film today comes from a recognition that
we have failed to prevent this nightmare from happening. Indeed
some of us many well see it in our lifetime. The
expression "You are what you eat" could one day have a very ironic
twist to it.
Soylent Green takes a serious
issue (and what could be more serious than the survival of our
species?) and treats it with the seriousness it deserves.
With two sci-fi classics (
20000
Leagues Under the Sea and
Fantastic Voyage) already under
his belt, director Richard Fleischer completes the hat-trick and, with
this dark cautionary tale, delivers one of the most compelling and
thought-provoking films of his career. Fleischer deserves credit
for taking a scenario which must have
seemed ludicrously far-fetched in the early 1970s and making it
frighteningly real. Although the film does teeter on the edge of
black comedy in a few places, it rarely overplays its hand, but instead shows
us a future for the human race that is both plausible and terrifying.
This film marks the final screen appearance of one of Hollywood's
greatest acting talents, Edward G. Robinson. In his 101st film
role, Robinson brings a heart-wrenching humanity to his portrayal,
providing a striking and very necessary counterpoint to the stark
inhumanity of the world in which his character lives. The
sequence in which Sol Roth goes off to meet his maker could have been
grotesquely sentimental, but Robinson (with some commendable support
from his co-star Charlton Heston) renders it exquisitely
poignant. The fact that the actor died from cancer two weeks
after completing work on this film lends even greater emotional weight
to his last scene.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of this film is its depiction of
mankind's complete moral disintegration, to the extent that human life
has become a cheap commodity, totally robbed of all its value.
This is best illustrated in the film's most notious sequence, the one
in which rioters are scooped up by bulldozers and
dumped as if they were mounds of trash. This vision of Hell
remains one of the most powerful and disturbing images of any
film. Is it any wonder that with the passage of time
Soylent Green appears increasingly
grim and depressing? Forty years ago, when the film first saw the
light of day, we may have had a chance to avoid the possible reality
it confronts us with, by changing our behaviour. Now it is almost certainly too
late...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Richard Fleischer film:
The Prince and the Pauper (1977)
Film Synopsis
It is 2022. Civilisation is falling apart and an over-crowded
world faces imminent starvation. The Soylent Corporation offers
hope, but it is struggling to keep up with the demand for its processed
food tablets, the only source of nutrition available to most of the
world's population. The most sought-after of these tablets is
Soylent Green, which, according to the company's advertising, is
manufactured from high-energy plankton. Thorn is one of the
privileged minority who still has a job. He works as a cop in New
York City, whose population now exceeds forty million. Thorn is
not rich, but he at least has a room, which he shares with an old
academic, Sol Roth. Most people sleep on the streets, in
stairwells or in crowded dormitories.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.