Soylent Green
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Soylent Green is a 1973 American science fiction film
directed by Richard Fleischer
and starring Charlton Heston
and, in his final film, Edward G. Robinson.
The film overlays the police procedural
and science fiction
genres as it depicts the investigation into the murder of a wealthy businessman
in a dystopian future suffering from pollution, overpopulation, depleted resources, poverty, dying oceans, and a hot climate due to the greenhouse effect. Much of the population
survives on processed food rations, including "soylent green".
The film, which
is loosely based upon the 1966 science fiction novel Make Room! Make Room!,
by Harry Harrison,
won the Nebula Award for Best Dramatic Presentation and
the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film in
1973.
Plot
In 2022, with
40 million people in New York City alone,
housing is dilapidated and overcrowded; homeless people fill the streets and
food is scarce; and most of the population survives on rations produced by the Soylent Corporation, whose
newest product is Soylent Green, a green wafer advertised to contain
"high-energy plankton", more
nutritious and palatable than its predecessors "Red" and
"Yellow", but in short supply.
New York City
Police Department detective Robert Thorn lives with his aged friend
Solomon "Sol" Roth, a former scholar who helps Thorn's investigations.
While investigating the murder of William R. Simonson, a director of the
Soylent Corporation, Thorn questions Shirl, a concubine (referred to as "furniture"),
and Tab Fielding, Simonson's bodyguard, who, when the murder took place, was
escorting Shirl to a store selling meat "under the counter" for
Simonson. Thorn later gives Roth the Soylent Oceanographic Survey Report,
2015 to 2019 found in Simonson's apartment. At the police station, Thorn
tells his lieutenant (Hatcher) that he suspects an assassination: nothing was
stolen from the apartment, its sophisticated alarm and security cameras failed
to detect the intruder, and Simonson's bodyguard was conveniently absent. Continuing
his investigation, Thorn visits Fielding's apartment and questions Fielding's
concubine, Martha, helping himself to a teaspoon of strawberry jam, later
identified by Roth as too great a luxury for the concubine of a bodyguard.
Under questioning, Shirl reveals that Simonson became troubled in the days
before his death. Thorn questions a Catholic priest Simonson had visited, but
the priest at first fails to remember Simonson and is later unable to describe
the confession. Fielding later murders the priest to silence him.
New York
Governor Joseph Santini, once Simonson's partner in a high-profile law firm,
orders the investigation closed, but Thorn disobeys and the Soylent Corporation
dispatches Simonson's murderer to kill Thorn. He tracks Thorn to a ration-distribution
where police officers are providing security. When the Soylent Green there is
exhausted and the crowd riots, the assassin tries to kill Thorn during the
confusion, but is crushed by a riot-control vehicle.
Roth takes
Soylent's oceanographic reports to
a like-minded group of researchers known as the Exchange, who agree that the
oceans no longer produce the plankton from which Soylent Green is reputedly
made, and conclude it is made from human remains. Unable to live with this
discovery, Roth seeks assisted suicide
at a government clinic called "Home". Thorn rushes to stop him, but
arrives too late, and is mesmerized by the euthanasia process's visual and musical montage—
a display of forests, wild animals, rivers, and ocean life, now extinct. Under
the influence of a lethal drug, Roth tells Thorn his discovery and begs him to
expose the truth. To this end, Thorn stows himself aboard a garbage truck to the disposal-center, where he
sees human corpses converted into Soylent Green. Returning to make his report,
he is ambushed by Fielding and others; and having failed to summon his
colleagues, converses with Shirl before connected to Hatcher. Thorn then
retreats into a cathedral filled with homeless people, where he kills Fielding
but is seriously injured. When the police arrive, Thorn urges Hatcher to spread
the word that "Soylent Green is people!".
Production
The screenplay
was based on Harry Harrison's novel Make Room! Make Room!
(1966), which is set in the year 1999 with the theme of overpopulation and
overuse of resources leading to increasing poverty, food shortages, and social
disorder. Harrison was contractually forbidden control over the screenplay and
kept from knowing during negotiations that it was MGM buying the film rights.[2] He discussed the adaptation in Omni's
Screen Flights/Screen Fantasies (1984, ISBN 0-385-19202-9; edited by Danny Peary),[2] noting that the "murder and chase
sequences [and] the 'furniture' girls are not what the film is about — and are
completely irrelevant" and answered his own rhetorical question "Am I
pleased with the film? I would say fifty percent".[2]
While the book
refers to "soylent steaks", it makes no reference to "Soylent
Green", the processed food rations depicted in the film. The book's title
was not used for the movie on grounds that it might have confused audiences
into thinking it a big-screen version of Make Room for Daddy.[3]
This was the
101st and last movie in which Edward G. Robinson
appeared; he died of cancer twelve days after the
filming, on January 26, 1973. Heston was the only member of the crew that
Robinson told of his cancer (immediately before filming the scene of Robinson's
character's death), knowing that this knowledge would deeply affect Heston, and
therefore his playing of the scene.[citation needed]
Robinson had previously worked with Heston in The Ten
Commandments (1956) and the make-up tests for Planet of the
Apes (1968).
The film's
opening sequence, depicting America becoming more crowded with a series of
archive photographs set to music, was created by filmmaker Charles Braverman. The "going home"
score in Roth's death scene was conducted by Gerald Fried and consists of the main themes from
Symphony
No. 6 ("Pathétique") by Tchaikovsky,
Symphony No. 6
("Pastoral") by Beethoven, and
the Peer Gynt Suite
("Morning Mood" and "Åse's Death")
by Edvard Grieg.
Critical response
The film was
released April 19, 1973.[4] Time called it "intermittently
interesting"; they note that "Heston forsak[es] his granite stoicism for once" and assert the film
"will be most remembered for the last appearance of Edward G. Robinson....
In a rueful irony, his death scene, in which he is hygienically dispatched with
the help of piped-in light classical music and movies of rich fields flashed
before him on a towering screen, is the best in the film."[5] New York Times critic A.H. Weiler wrote
"Soylent Green projects essentially simple, muscular melodrama a good deal more effectively than it
does the potential of man's seemingly witless destruction of the Earth's
resources"; Weiler concludes "Richard Fleischer's direction stresses
action, not nuances of meaning or characterization. Mr. Robinson is pitiably
natural as the realistic, sensitive oldster facing the futility of living in
dying surroundings. But Mr. Heston is simply a rough cop chasing standard bad
guys. Their 21st-century New York occasionally is frightening but it is rarely
convincingly real."[4]
As of February
2013, Soylent Green has a 71% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 34 reviews.[6]
American Film
Institute Lists
- AFI's 100
Years...100 Thrills - Nominated[7]
- AFI's
100 Years...100 Movie Quotes:
- "Soylent
Green is people!" - #77
- AFI's 10 Top 10
- Nominated Science Fiction Film[8]
Home video
Soylent Green was released
on laserdisc by MGM/UA in 1992 (ISBN 0792813995, OCLC 31684584).[9] In November 2007, Warner Home Video released the film on DVD
concurrent with the DVD releases of two other sci-fi films; Logan's Run
(1976) and Outland (1981).[10] A Blu-ray Disc release followed on March 29, 2011.
Cultural references
Soylent Green is referred to
in a number of television series and other media, either for dramatic or
comedic effect.
Starting in the
summer of 2011, a green wafer containing plankton was released under the name
'Soylent Green'. Created and produced by the Parallax Corporation,[11] and manufactured under official
license, its packaging is an imaginary concept of how Soylent Green might have
been sold.[12]
The entire wiki
link is at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soylent_Green
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