Does it make me a bad person because I don’t see anything inherently wrong with the idea behind Soylent Green?
For those who haven’t ever seen it and don’t wish to know the big “secret” of the film, I suggest not reading on. Continue at your own peril. Ye be warned.
Well, I guess I’m really not a nice guy, since I think turning people into processed food is a perfectly marvelous idea. Which is what happens in the dystopic future Soylent Green is set in. (If you’d like to read a nice summary of the film, I suggest Wikipedia.)
This should not, however, be confused with me proclaiming that we should give carte blanche to the Powers That Be to turn old people into food for the rest of us. Though that might be the perfect way to turn homeless people and people constantly on welfare into productive members of society.
Kidding.
First, let me provide a little bit of info about the film so that maybe you’ll understand what the hell I’m talking about. In a horrible future (2022, I believe), the environment is decaying, disease runs rampant, and the world is in the throes of massive overpopulation — so much so, that stairways of apartment buildings are packed full of homeless people — and the government has had to resort to creative, authoritarian methods to keeps things running. Not running smoothly, but just running. One company, the Soylent Corporation, produces these sort of nutrient wafers that feed over half the world’s population. Throughout the film, the main character, a detective (played by my man, Charlton Heston), tries to unravel the mystery surrounding the murder of a man on the Soylent board of directors. Stuff happens, more people die, Heston bangs a hot piece of “furniture” (def. “an attractive young woman who serves as both domestic help and sex object to the rich” — who says the future is all bad, eh? Again with the kidding.) at the dead man’s apartment, and then he winds up at a dead-body-disposal/food-manufacturing plant. Here he discovers, egads, that “Soylent Green is people!”
It’s at this point in the movie that I find myself, not shocked or horrified, but saying, “So what?” I think it’s a great idea that shows foresight, ingenuity, and an ability to make hard decision. As I see it, turning dead people into food for the starving, teeming masses is just another form of recycling. Really, where is the logic in trying to dispose of a bunch of corpses in a future where space is already at a premium? That’s about as logical as sticking your head up a butcher’s ass to get a look at t-bone steak, instead of taking the cow’s word for it.
To be fair, the film does try to twist the knife a little more near the end. Heston prophesies that soon, “they’ll be turning people into cattle.” This could be a valid concern, and I would have some issues with that. Recycling dead people and breeding humans for slaughter are two entirely different matters . . . though both have some merit.
Overall, the film is pretty damn effective. It’s an engaging sci-fi noir, and probably more importantly, it serves as a thoughtful warning of what might happen if the human race keeps on raping the Earth — or waterboarding Gaia, if you prefer — the way it has been since the Industrial Revolution.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to make myself a snack. All this talk of food is making me hungry.
JAB

9 Responses to “Peoplez = Yum”
Have you read ‘Boomsday’ by Christopher Buckley? After reading this little diatribe, I think you’d enjoy it.
Just checked it out on Amazon; it does look entertaining. I’ll see if the library has it. Buckley’s name sounded familiar, and then I saw he wrote Thank You For Smoking.
Thanks for the tip.
JAB
What’s wrong with Soylent Green? Seriously dude it’s disgusting you’d say something like that. Humanity looks down on you for such a statement.
It obviously tastes like crap. You’re telling me the best thing that we could come up with in 2022 is fucking nutrient wafers? How fucking gay. At least dress it up with some hydrogenated human skin to look like lettuce and a little ketchup and mustard, and then you’d at least have McDonald’s. Nutrient Wafers?, sick. Who the fuck wants to eat wafers?
Oh yeah I also heard once (albeit from a horrible source) that the entire population of the planet earth could fit into an over-sprawled city like Jacksonville, where there’s enough square footage to hold every man woman and child, with 12 square feet of living space. The source, an intelligent design video I watched for a laugh, although the speaker was pretty amusing and dynamic, it’s really dissapointing he’s batting for the other team.
Why would you stick your head up a butcher’s ass to look for a t-bone?
Nick: I’m sure in the next couple of decades we’ll see McDonald’s marketing the “McWafer” and see new restaurants like “Man-Fil-A.” Other restaurants like “Frisch’s Big Boy” will take on wholly new connotations.
Nate: Have you ever seen Tommy Boy? If not, go here for at least a basic context.
JAB
I haven’t watched that movie in at least ten years. Actually, I haven’t watched ANY movies in ten years.
And you certainly haven’t watched Mallrats in that many years.
JAB
[...] favorites were his later, sci-fi stuff: PLANET OF THE APES, SOYLENT GREEN (which I wrote about here a couple of months ago), and THE OMEGA [...]