From collectibles to cars, buy and sell all kinds of items on eBay
home | pay | site map
Shop for itemsSell your itemTrack your eBay activitiesLearn, connect, and stay informed-for business and for funGet help, find answers and contact Customer SupportAdvanced Search
Home > Listing Index > Movies > Soylent Green

Movies - Soylent Green


Soylent Green is a classic 1973 science fiction movie starring Charlton Heston
, Edward G. Robinson
and Chuck Connors
. It is credited as being based on the 1966 science fiction novella about overpopulation by Harry Harrison, Make Room! Make Room!, but maintains only a loose structure of that work, and diverges into its own plot points and ideas.

The most common use of the term Soylent Green today is in reference to the fictional food product which is at the center of the film's plot.

Movie

The movie, set in the year 2022, depicts a future dystopia, a Malthusian catastrophe that takes place because humanity has failed to pursue sustainable development and has not halted population growth. Global warming, air and water pollution have produced a year-round heatwave. Food and fuel resources are scarce, housing is dilapidated and overcrowded, and widespread government-sponsored euthanasia is encouraged as a means of reducing overpopulation. Charlton Heston
plays Robert Thorn, a New York City police detective, investigating the suspicious murder of William R. Simonson (Joseph Cotten
), a former member of the board of the Soylent Corporation. Thorn's roommate is Sol Roth (Edward G. Robinson
), a onetime college professor who is an elderly police researcher.

In the movie, meat, bread, cheese, fruit and vegetables are scarce and extremely expensive, and the government dispenses rations of synthetic food substances made by the Soylent Corporation: Soylent Yellow, Soylent Red, and the newest product, Soylent Green, the most popular version. As the name suggests, "Soylent" is derived from soybeans and lentils.

However, during his investigation of the Simonson murder, Thorn uncovers a strange conspiracy, which will be revealed if he sees what goes on behind closed doors at the euthanasia centers. When an elderly and dispirited Sol opts for euthanasia, Thorn forces his way in to the euthansia center at gunpoint and makes two shocking discoveries. First, he sees motion pictures of the unspoiled Earth of former times, which are shown only to those about to be euthanized. Thorn is startled to see how beautiful the Earth was before it sank to its current state.

Second, when Thorn follows the disposal of Sol's corpse, he discovers that Soylent Green includes the recycled bodies of people who have used government-sponsored euthanasia centers, as well as those killed by the government in an attempt to keep knowledge of this form of cannibalism from the populace, and not from plankton as advertised, real plankton being scarce.

Thorn's anguished cry of "Soylent Green is people!" -- his last line in the movie as he is being carried off in a stretcher, holding up a bloody hand -- has become an iconic catch phrase and is frequently referenced/parodied in many other works. Reasons for this extensive use in popular entertainment are difficult to pin down to a single explanation. Some "blame" has been pointed to the film's trailer, which indirectly revealed Soylent Green's main ingredient by using quick cuts of body bags being carried across a conveyor belt over spoken narration: "What is the secret of Soylent Green?" The resulting spoiled surprise may have contributed to popular culture's tendency to refer to the movie (see Cultural impact below).

The world of Soylent Green

The world of Soylent Green is complex and detailed. It becomes clear that the culture of Earth is significantly different from the time in which it was filmed.

Lexicon

  • book refers to people who work with books, such as researchers. Sol Roth is referred to by Thorn as a "book". Real books are rare, and no longer printed.
  • d is the common vernacular for the currency, presumably the US dollar. Several outlandish prices are given, including 150 ds for a jar of strawberry jam and 270 ds for a few vegetables, but it is ultimately unclear if these prices are the result of the extreme famine, or inflation, as no other items' values are declared (however, notably, cents are still being used). Soylent Green costs 2 ds per kilo.
  • furniture refers to women who are part of an organized system of concubinage, in which attractive women are offered as escorts as an amenity included with an upscale apartment.
  • scoop refers to riot control "scoop" dump trucks which pick up rioters in mechanical grabs, as shown in the publicity picture. Despite ominous depictions, it is not clear from the movie whether the scoops take the people off to the Soylent factory to be made into food, or simply to a detention center.
  • going home and gone home is a euphemism that indicates that the subject is choosing or has chosen to be euthanized.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Soylent Green ]



Some related entries: The Myth | Raw Deal | Blood Rain | Hitler Youth Quex | I Still Know What You Did Last Summer | Undercover Blues | Barbara Myerhoff | Mindwalk | Brown Sugar | The Ring | Kidagakash

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Soylent Green; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

Searches on eBay

Related searches on eBay


eBay Pulse | eBay Reviews | eBay Stores | Half.com | Kijiji | PayPal | Popular Searches | ProStores | Rent.com | Shopping.com
Australia | Austria | Belgium | China | France | Germany | India | Italy | Spain | United Kingdom

About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Policies | Site Map | Help