Soylent Green
Soylent Green | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Fleischer |
Screenplay by | Stanley R. Greenberg |
Based on | Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison |
Produced by | Walter Seltzer Russell Thacher |
Starring | Charlton Heston Leigh Taylor-Young Edward G. Robinson |
Cinematography | Richard H. Kline |
Edited by | Samuel E. Beetley |
Music by | Fred Myrow |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3.6 million (rentals)[1] |
Soylent Green is a 1973 American dystopian thriller film directed by Richard Fleischer and starring Charlton Heston and Leigh Taylor-Young. Edward G. Robinson appears in his final film. Loosely based on the 1966 science fiction novel Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison, it combines both police procedural and science fiction genres: the investigation into the murder of a wealthy businessman; and a dystopian future of dying oceans and year-round humidity due to the greenhouse effect, resulting in suffering from pollution, poverty, overpopulation, euthanasia and depleted resources.[2]
In 1973, it won the Nebula Award for Best Dramatic Presentation and the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film.
Plot
In the year 2022, the cumulative effects of overpopulation, pollution and some apparent climate catastrophe have caused severe worldwide shortages of food, water and housing. There are 40 million people in New York City alone, where only the city's elite can afford spacious apartments, clean water and natural food, and even then at horrendously high prices. The homes of the elite usually include concubines who are referred to as "furniture" and serve the tenants as slaves.
Within the city lives NYPD detective Frank Thorn and his aged friend Sol Roth, a highly intelligent analyst, referred to as a "Book". Roth remembers the world when it had animals and real food, and possesses a small library of reference materials to assist Thorn. Thorn is tasked with investigating the murder of the wealthy and influential William R. Simonson, and quickly learns that Simonson had been assassinated and was a board member of Soylent Industries.
Soylent Industries, which derives its name from a combination of "soy" and "lentil", controls the food supply of half of the world and sells the artificially produced wafers, including "Soylent Red" and "Soylent Yellow". Their latest product is the far more flavorful and nutritious "Soylent Green", advertised as being made from ocean plankton, but is in short supply. As a result of the weekly supply bottlenecks, the hungry masses regularly riot, and they are brutally removed from the streets by means of police vehicles that scoop the rioters with large shovels and dump them within the vehicle's container.
With the help of "furniture" Shirl, with whom Thorn begins a relationship, his investigation leads to a priest that Simonson had visited and confessed to shortly before his death. The priest is only able to hint at a gruesome truth before he himself is murdered. By order of the governor, Thorn is instructed to end the investigation, but he presses on. He is attacked during a riot, by the same assassin who killed Simonson, but the killer is crushed by a police vehicle.
Roth brings two volumes of oceanographic reports Thorn had procured from Simonson's apartment to the team of Books at the Supreme Exchange. The books confirm that the oceans no longer produce plankton, and deduce that Soylent Green is produced from some inconceivable supply of protein. They also deduce that Simonson's murder was ordered by his fellow Soylent Industries board members, knowing he was increasingly troubled by the truth.
Roth is so disgusted with his life in a degraded world that he decides to "return to the home of God" and seeks assisted suicide at a government clinic. Thorn finds a message left by Roth and rushes to stop him, but arrives too late. Roth and Thorn are mesmerized by the euthanasia process's visual and musical montage—long-gone forests, wild animals, rivers and ocean life. Before dying, Roth whispers what he has learned to Thorn, begging him to find proof, so that the Council of Nations can take action.
Thorn boards a truck transporting bodies from the euthanasia center to a recycling plant, where the secret is revealed – human corpses are being converted into Soylent Green. Thorn is spotted and kills his attackers, but is himself wounded. As Thorn is tended to by paramedics, he urges his police chief to spread the truth he has discovered and initiate proceedings against the company. While being taken away, Thorn shouts out to the surrounding crowd, "Soylent Green is people!"
Cast
- Charlton Heston as Thorn
- Leigh Taylor-Young as Shirl
- Chuck Connors as Tab
- Joseph Cotten as Simonson
- Brock Peters as Hatcher
- Paula Kelly as Martha
- Edward G. Robinson as Sol Roth
- Stephen Young as Gilbert
- Mike Henry as Kulozik
- Lincoln Kilpatrick as The Priest
- Roy Jenson as Donovan
- Leonard Stone as Charles
- Whit Bissell as Santini
- Celia Lovsky as the Exchange Leader
- Dick Van Patten as Usher #1
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 denied control over the screenplay and was not told during negotiations that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was buying the film rights.[3] He discussed the adaptation in Omni's Screen Flights/Screen Fantasies (1984),[3][4] noting, the "murder and chase sequences [and] the 'furniture' girls are not what the film is about — and are completely irrelevant", and answered his own question, "Am I pleased with the film? I would say fifty percent".[3]
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.[5]
This was the 101st and last movie in which Edward G. Robinson appeared; he died of bladder cancer twelve days after the completion of filming, on January 26, 1973. Robinson had previously worked with Heston in The Ten Commandments (1956) and the make-up tests for Planet of the Apes (1968). In his book The Actor's Life: Journal 1956-1976, Heston wrote "He knew while we were shooting, though we did not, that he was terminally ill. He never missed an hour of work, nor was late to a call. He never was less than the consummate professional he had been all his life. I'm still haunted, though, by the knowledge that the very last scene he played in the picture, which he knew was the last day's acting he would ever do, was his death scene. I know why I was so overwhelmingly moved playing it with him."[6]
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.
A custom cabinet unit of the early arcade game Computer Space was used in Soylent Green and is considered to be the first video game appearance in a movie.[7]
Critical response
The film was released April 19, 1973, and met with mixed reactions from critics.[8] Time called it "intermittently interesting", noting that "Heston forsak[es] his granite stoicism for once", and asserting 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."[9] 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."[8]
Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four, calling it "a good, solid science-fiction movie, and a little more."[10] Gene Siskel gave the film one-and-a-half stars out of four and called it "a silly detective yarn, full of juvenile Hollywood images. Wait 'til you see the giant snow shovel scoop the police use to round up rowdies. You may never stop laughing."[11] Arthur D. Murphy of Variety wrote, "The somewhat plausible and proximate horrors in the story of 'Soylent Green' carry the Russell Thacher-Walter Seltzer production over its awkward spots to the status of a good futuristic exploitation film."[12] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called it "a clever, rough, modestly budgeted but imaginative work."[13] Penelope Gilliatt of The New Yorker was negative, writing, "This pompously prophetic thing of a film hasn't a brain in its beanbag. Where is democracy? Where is the popular vote? Where is women's lib? Where are the uprising poor, who would have suspected what was happening in a moment?"[14]
On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 71% rating, based on 38 reviews, with an average rating of 7/10.[15]
Awards and honors
- Winner Best Science Fiction Film of Year – Saturn Award, Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films (Richard Fleischer, Walter Seltzer, Russell Thacher)
- Winner Grand Prize – Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival (Richard Fleischer)
- Nominee Best Film of Year (Best Dramatic Presentation) – Hugo Awards (Richard Fleischer, Stanley Greenberg, Harry Harrison)
- Winner Best Film of Year (Best Dramatic Presentation) – Nebula Award, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (Stanley Greenberg, Harry Harrison)
- "Soylent Green is people!" is ranked 77th on the American Film Institute's list AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes.
Home media
Soylent Green was released on Capacitance Electronic Disc by MGM/CBS Home Video and later on laserdisc by MGM/UA in 1992 (ISBN 0792813995, OCLC 31684584).[16] In November 2007, Warner Home Video released the film on DVD concurrent with the DVD releases of two other science fiction films; Logan's Run (1976), a film that covers similar themes of dystopia and overpopulation, and Outland (1981).[17] A Blu-ray Disc release followed on March 29, 2011.
See also
- Survival film, about the film genre, with a list of related films
- Soylent, a brand of meal replacement products whose creator was inspired by the book and film to use that name
- Cloud Atlas, a 2012 film also depicting a future society where workers are fed with human remains
References
- ^ "Big Rental Films of 1973", Variety, January 9, 1974 p 19
- ^ Shirley, John (September 23, 2007). "Locus Online: John Shirley on Soylent Green". Locus Online. Retrieved November 17, 2016.
- ^ a b c Jeff Stafford. "Soylent Green (1973)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
- ^ Danny Peary, ed. (1984). Omni's Screen Flights/Screen Fantasies. ISBN 0-385-19202-9.
- ^ Harry Harrison (1984). "A Cannibalised Novel Becomes Soylent Green". Omni's Screen Flights/Screen Fantasies. Ireland On-Line. Retrieved September 7, 2009.
- ^ Charlton Heston (1978). Hollis Alpert (ed.). The Actor's Life: Journal 1956-1976. E.P. Dutton. p. 395. ISBN 0525050302.
- ^ Goldberg, Marty; Vendel, Curt (2012). Atari Inc: Business is Fun. Syzygy Press. p. 45. ISBN 9780985597405. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
- ^ a b A.H. Weiler (April 20, 1973). "Soylent Green (1973)". The New York Times. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
- ^ "Cinema: Quick Cuts". Time. April 30, 1973. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (April 27, 1973). "Soylent Green". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved December 10, 2018.
- ^ Siskel, Gene (May 1, 1973). "Scorpio & Soylent". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 5.
- ^ Murphy, Arthur D. (April 18, 1973), "Soylent Green". Variety. 22.
- ^ Champlin, Charles (April 18, 1973). "Grim Future in 'Soylent Green'". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1.
- ^ Gilliatt, Penelope (April 28, 1973). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. 131.
- ^ "Soylent Green (1973)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved November 22, 2019.
- ^ "Soylent green / Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc". Miami University Libraries. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
- ^ "The Future Is Then". New York Sun. November 27, 2007. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
External links
- Soylent Green at IMDb
- Soylent Green at the TCM Movie Database
- Soylent Green at AllMovie
- Soylent Green at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- Soylent Green at Rotten Tomatoes
- 1973 films
- 1970s science fiction thriller films
- American films
- American science fiction thriller films
- Films about cannibalism
- Climate change films
- Dystopian films
- English-language films
- Environmental films
- Films about famine
- Euthanasia
- Fictional food and drink
- Films based on science fiction novels
- Films directed by Richard Fleischer
- Films set in 2022
- Films set in the 2020s
- Films set in New York City
- Films set in the future
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Nebula Award for Best Script-winning works
- Overpopulation fiction
- Procedural films
- American neo-noir films