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Soylent Green Movie Review
Soylent Green Review
"Soylent Green" Overview

Rating: PG
1973
Cast and Crew
Director : Richard FleischerProducer : Humbert Balsan
Screenwiter : Stanley R. Greenberg
Starring : Charlton Heston,Leigh Taylor-Young,Chuck Connors,Joseph Cotten,Edward G. Robinson
Charlton Heston runs down the crowded street shrieking at the top of his lungs,
"Soy-LENT green is PUR-PLLLLLE! IHHHT'S PUHHHHR-PLLLLLLE!" All right, that
scene does not occur in the actual ‘70s pulp sci-fi movie -- it was the nifty
Saturday Night Live parody where the late Phil Hartman made a mockery of
Chuck's hambone line delivery.
Let's pause for a moment and reflect on Charlton Heston's wonderful '70s
science fiction career. He had a penchant for wincing his way through angry
line deliveries like, "Gehhhht yer STINKING PAWS off me, you DAMN DIRTY APE!"
using every wrinkle in his brow, his shark-like teeth gleaming in the sun.
Sweat would glisten on his prominent brow and chiseled cheeks. When he dies, we
shall say there was an actor.
On to Soylent Green. Before the urban paranoia begins, we're treated to a black
and white montage that shows the farmlands of America becoming transformed via
an industrial revolution into an overcrowded nightmare. This is accompanied by
happy-go-lucky piano trills, which become increasingly discordant as society
falls apart. It vaguely reminds me of the "Eleanor Rigby" section of Yellow
Submarine.
The overpopulated streets of New York City, all 40 million residents in Soylent
Green, are shot through a hazy green filter, which makes everything look as
though it were taking a bath in smog. Bodies litter the steps of every
brownstone, over which Charlton Heston marches on his way to work every day.
The police are often put on riot duty to squelch the crowds which assemble
every Tuesday, which happens to be "Soylent Green" day. Yes, Soylent Green is
the wafer-thin food of choice among the masses. The government claims that this
mass product has been created in rural factories from plankton extracts -- heh
heh heh. If they run out of Soylent Green, the streets become ablaze with angry
customers.
Charlton Heston swaggers onto the scene as Detective Thorn, who is casually
investigating the murder of a prominent businessman in the Soylent company
(played by Joseph Cotton, milking his five minutes of screen time for all
they're worth). Mostly, he uses the opportunity to see how the "other half"
lives. He's stuck in a crummy apartment with no food, air conditioning or
water.
While Cotton's body rests in a puddle of blood, old Chuck Heston raids the
fridge and chugs down some of the "real bourbon -- God damn!" He barely has
time to interrogate the one and only suspect (evil Chuck Connors) as he stands
in front of the air conditioner, gasping and baring those teeth as only
Charlton Heston can. He inhales the soap with childlike pleasure and washes his
hands -- who needs to search for clues when there's soap!
The plot trudges along with Heston's non-investigation leading him to romancing
Cotten's "furniture." That's what they call the women of the future.
"Furniture." Shirl (Leigh Taylor-Young) is the buxom furniture in question, and
she meekly defers to the will of Moses. They make love discreetly off-screen
then take a jolly shower together. This is the "Charlton Heston and the Girl
Both Laugh" scene. No dialogue. Just "HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!" as they soap
themselves up.
It's quite an amusing movie. The plot (based on the book Make Room! Make Room!)
noodles around, content to show the world of the future rather than concentrate
on any sort of cohesive mission for Heston. Sure enough, Charlton stumbles
across the fact that Soylent Green just might have something to do with the
murder.
Be forewarned: spoilers ahead. But I think Saturday Night Live dispelled all
Soylent Green plot twists a few years ago. The climax of the movie itself is
pretty disappointing after Phil Hartman’s tour-de-force of running down the
street (as it happens, Chuck is dragged away in a stretcher). Those hoping for
the equivalent of the classic “DAMN YOU!” finale of Planet of the Apes or the
heavy religiosity of The Omega Man.
But (spoilers ahead, last warning!) you can’t beat the dialogue: “Soon they'll
be breeding us like cattle! You've got to warn EVERYone and tell them! Soylent
GREEN is MADE of people! PEEE-O-PLE! You've got to tell them! Soylent green is
PEOPLE!”
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp
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