by blukatzen » Sat 24 Feb 2007, 05:18:07
Hubby and I happened to come across this movie last night and went to see this at the local 3.00 cheapie cinema in Chicago near our neighborhood. (we didn't even know it was there, we saw it on the marquee the night before..we'd figured we'd see it on DVD.)
We were both thinking on the movie today, and speaking about it, and ratcheting up our plans to get out of the city pronto. (and I leave behind a very good garden and small orchard...sigh..)
There were a few things that I didn't "follow" in the movie that I think may be addressed in the book, and due to dialog, we couldn't make out slang, and some accents..etc.
Parts of the movie moved *very* fast, and went even faster as it moved along. It seemed that you'd better pay attention to every bit or else you'd miss something.
I frankly could care less about the premise of the story..childlessness in the future..which I find HIGHLY implausible..there were things that also did follow continuity like where did all the cigarettes, booze, keep coming from? (from 20 years ago?? Cigarettes get kinda stale..there were some things that did not "fit" the continuity of the storyline. If there was a pandemic in '08, where did all these factory-made goods come from, coffee bars, etc, if "Britain soldiers on ALONE!" We know with less people, resource depletion will make all those factory items dry up within one week, let alone 20 some odd years later. There were certain things that didn't make sense..but the scenery was good. THAT was what was realistic..the grime, the hopelessness, the acceptance OF that hopelessness in most city-dwellers.
If this was a film about resource depletion, and all the topics covered here, I'd understand it, but no more babies? They should be dancing in the streets for a reprieve for a bit. Yet they took every chance to blow each other to bits at every turn.
(However, after 5 minutes of that carping about "Baby" Diego, I wanted him dead too.)
Another thing..I wish they'd explored the Human "Project" and the ship "Tomorrow"..didn't quite get what the end result of all of that "get the woman/baby to the ship" thing was supposed to be, but I could have missed that in the accents, etc. I suppose that is covered a bit more extensively in the book.
What was interesting to see was the scenery and levels of depravation society had fallen to. Just amazing, and if you could film "PeakOilSociety".."after the fall"...this would be it. This was just haunting, and it will remain in my memory for a long time. It is not too long away either, although I believe we'll be at this long before 2027, the year the film's storyline takes place. I would say within the next 5 to 10 years, easy.
I asked my hubby where "we'll" fit into society..countryside dwellers, outer-ring city, (we've not enough $$ for inner core city dwellers)..and he is determined to be countryside after watching this. If anyone is sitting on the fence in preperation, watching this movie because you've understood all the implications of what's been written here in the last few years should make the move that much more imperative. Get moving NOW...