by WildRose » Thu 12 Apr 2007, 15:52:39
I just watched the movie. It was really very grim. To me, it seemed that it would be impossible to live a decent life in the conditions depicted, unless you were someone like Michael Caine's character, living in his sustainable home in the country. The city was a disaster. Theo, the main character, and others like him who still had a job that allowed him to live, passed through train stations every day that were manned by heavily armed military, keeping the poor and starving, begging at the stations, from bothering those getting off the trains from their jobs, who would be seen, I suppose, as "contributors to society" and worth protecting. There was a reference to "suicide kits" and images of people jumping off buildings, several at once. The situation was very grim for immigrants.
All through the movie, there were images you could associate with a total societal crash, filth everywhere, people begging for something to eat, abandoned buildings where people huddled together like sardines and kept chickens, a flock of sheep running through the city. In the countryside, there was evidence of polluted sky and water, lots of dead livestock, desperate people running in groups. There was mention of a flu pandemic in 2008. Did anyone else catch the line, by a radio announcer as he introduced a song, "Here's a blast from the past, from 2003, a time when people refused to believe the future that was around the corner?" (not exactly quoted, but almost).
Chilling, and very well done.