<screaming at the top of my lungs in a nifty charleton heston voice>SOYLENT GREEN IS PPPEEEEEEEOOOOOPPPLLLEEEE!!! PPPEEEEEEOOOOPPPPPLLLLLLEEE!!! </sattomlianchv>
bowing Thank you, thank you
“…the dark side of the mirror always threw our malice back…”
I read Make Room, Make Room when I was in high school and, IIRC, this is no soylent green in the story. I remember a mention of soylent brown, but it and what it was made of were not the point of the story. I figured soylent brown was a soy version of hamburger.
I’ve never seen the movie because, from what I’ve heard, it’s about as faithful to the book as the movie Lawnmower Man was to its source.
“I hope life isn’t a big joke, because I don’t get it,” Jack Handy
Correct, Soylent Green is losely based of the short story by Harrison, Make Room, Make Room. The story however is less concerned with the practicles of overcrowding, and more with the sociology of it.
>>Being Chaotic Evil means never having to say your sorry…unless the other guy is bigger than you.<<
There was a “Newsradio” episode that made fun of Soylent Green. For the episode, the cast was transported to the future, and were the only humans left in a giant space ship that is their building. Phil Hartman’s character did a commercial on air that was the Soylent Green dramatic speech, except he performed it in that pleasant, chipper voice used for commercials. Hilarious.
Despite the surprise “Soylent Green i people!” ending in the movie, from what I’ve heard, “Soylent” from the book was merely an amalgam of SOYbeans and LENtils. This could be a crock, so don’t hesitate to debunk me.
occ–you are absolutely correct. In the novel, soylent green and soylent brown were just harmless processed foods made to keep the masses alive. The point of the novel was to show how awful the near future (1999!) would be if the size of the population increased dramatically.
When MGM bought the rights to the book (or, as Harrison says, screwed him out of the rights), they decided that showing an overpopulated world just wasn’t dramatic enough. They introduced the McGuffin of “what is soylent green?” so Chuck Heston would have something to emote about.
BTW, the Richard Matheson novel “I Am Legend” was in fact the source for “The Omega Man”, as well as a 1964 Vincent Price film, “The Last Man on Earth.” Both dealt with a lone survivor in a post-Apocalyptic world overrun by vampires. I’ve heard rumors that H’wood is interested in remaking the film again, only this time they’ll try to remain faithful to the book. I wish them luck; it’s a classic SF/horror novel.
It’s my duty; my duty as a complete and utter bastard.–Arnold J. Rimmer.
And for you trivia fans: what original Star Trek “guest star” had a small part in the movie?
Which I liked very much, by the way. Especially the way they ran the credits after the end, against the film and music that Sol enjoyed while he died. It always makes me want to go outside and enjoy the plant life.
SouthernXYL–it was Whit Bissell. He played Mr. Lurry in “The Trouble with Tribbles”, and Santini in “Soylent Green.”
Also, Brock Peters, who played Hatcher in SG, played Captain Sisko’s father Joseph on “DS9”, as well as Admiral Cartwright in “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.”