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Electra ([personal profile] starlady) wrote2011-09-20 09:46 am
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Contagion (2011)

Contagion. Dir. Steven Soderbergh, 2011.

This was a pretty good movie. And it was both less scary and less gruesome than I was expecting, which was a personal plus. As my bio-major friend with whom I saw it said, in terms of disease prevention and pandemic response, "This movie didn't really tell us anything we didn't already know."

Let me give you a plot summary: an entirely new virus emerges somewhere in the world (but WHERE?) and begins doing what viruses do best, i.e. infecting its hosts, namely human beings. The drama comes from the search for a cure (WHEN will it happen?) as we watch characters around the world, but mostly Stateside, to whom we've been introduced with varying degrees of depth, deal with the pandemic and its social consequences (WHO will die?). Also featuring Sanjay Gupta, as himself.

As other people have said, the movie skips most of the science in the middle of the "new disease emerges, amplifies, is investigated and contained" paradigm to focus on the initial infection, amplification, and containment phases, rather than the scut work of science in the middle. And with that major caveat, within the limits of a Hollywood movie, its portrayal of that process and its speculation on the degree of social dislocation that it would entail seemed fairly reasonable to me, who has an interested layman's grasp of these matters, having gone through an epidemiology & pandemics phase a few years ago. The eventual isolation of the index case and the location of its contraction are also consistent with the best current scientific knowledge, and I enjoyed the mild cinematic ingenuity with which it was eventually revealed. In fact, as a Steven Soderbergh movie, I was somewhat surprised by its overall lack of technical innovation.

I am sad that Chin Han seems to be unable to get any roles but that of "dodgy dude in Hong Kong" in Hollywood films; I was also surprised at how much of a lie-spewing asshole Jude Law's character turned out to be, which I suspect to some extent is a symptom of old media (movies) hating on new media (blogs). It's actually mildly interesting that none of the central physician characters (Laurence Fishburne, Kate Winslet, Marion Cotillard, and Jennifer Ehle) were white men, but of course, most of them were white women. For a supposedly global movie, the cast was disproportionately white, and a white guy--Matt Damon--and his daughter do provide the movie's main emotional focus in most respects, though I thought its portrayal of him (Patient Zero was his wife) was reasonably nuanced and sympathetic. The movie's central message (people will die, but the CDC will save us) was in the end fairly optimistic, which as a moviegoer I appreciated, even if watching this movie through the lens of having recently read Mira Grant's Newsflesh books did give me an odd double vision at times.

[personal profile] boundbooks 2011-09-20 05:21 pm (UTC)(link)
"The movie's central message (people will die, but the CDC will save us) was in the end fairly optimistic, which as a moviegoer I appreciated"

"I was also surprised at how much of a lie-spewing asshole Jude Law's character turned out to be, which I suspect to some extent is a symptom of old media (movies) hating on new media (blogs)."

I'm actually totally willing to take these two in conjunction, simply because in a major Hollywood blockbuster, there's no telling what kind of damage the opposite message could do. The US is seeing a rise of measles outbreaks, due to bloggers who are rabidly anti-CDC and anti-vaccination. There is a strong cultural pull in the US to slander the CDC and seek 'the truth' from fringe bloggers, so I'm really glad to hear that this movie comes down hard on that idea.

I'm sure you already know all of that, but I'm reading this part of the movie as perhaps being less 'anti-new media' and more calling out those anti-vaccination, anti-CDC people who are actively responsible for the current outbreaks of diseases (which were once completely under control) in the US.

"Between January 1 and April 25, 2008, a total of 64 confirmed measles cases were preliminarily reported in the United States to the CDC,[69][70] the most reported by this date for any year since 2001. Of the 64 cases, 54 were associated with importation of measles from other countries into the United States, and 63 of the 64 patients were unvaccinated or had unknown or undocumented vaccination status.[71]

By July 9, 2008, a total of 127 cases were reported in 15 states (including 22 in Arizona),[72] making it the largest U.S. outbreak since 1997 (when 138 cases were reported).[73] Most of the cases were acquired outside of the United States and afflicted individuals who had not been vaccinated.

By July 30, 2008, the number of cases had grown to 131. Of these, about half involved children whose parents rejected vaccination. The 131 cases occurred in seven different outbreaks. There were no deaths, and 15 hospitalizations. Eleven of the cases had received at least one dose of the measles vaccine. Children who were unvaccinated or whose vaccination status was unknown accounted for 122 cases. Some of these were under the age when vaccination is recommended, but in 63 cases, the vaccinations had been refused for religious or philosophical reasons.

On May 24, 2011 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the United States has had 118 measles cases so far this year. The 118 cases were reported by 23 states and New York City between Jan 1 and May 20. Of the 118 cases, 105 (89%) were associated with cases abroad and 105 (89%) of the 118 patients had not been vaccinated.[74]" - https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Measles#Recent_outbreaks
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[personal profile] recessional 2011-09-20 05:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I was going to bring this up; I was actually really pleased in reading summaries of the movie that this was the case, frankly. And not just measles; babies are dying of pertussis again. Pertussis. *insert frothing flail about wanting to brain people with beams here*
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[personal profile] recessional 2011-09-21 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
Possibly? I made it pretty quickly and was genuinely apprehensive that Law's char was going to turn out to be a protagonist/right all along/etc, which is the route most movies would have taken, I feel (after all, it's the underdog with the Real Truth being Hushed Up by the Government - this is the common storyline) and ready to seethe about it at length.

Then it turns out not so much, and I was very appreciative. But it's also a continually-active STABBITY-trigger of mine, so the flipside is that I'm very likely primed very much to react the way I did.
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[personal profile] lnhammer 2011-09-20 05:21 pm (UTC)(link)
*icon♥*
teigh_corvus: ([Misc. Movies] Movie Time!)

[personal profile] teigh_corvus 2011-09-20 05:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I've heard mixed things about this film, so I really appreciated reading a review from someone who has a layman's knowledge of the material. Thanks. :)

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[personal profile] seekingferret 2011-09-20 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Raising the important question: If I write fic about Sanjay Gupta on a motorcycle with a machete, killing bad guys and stopping diseases in their tracks, is that RPF or FPF?

[personal profile] boundbooks 2011-09-20 08:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Yuletide would say RPF, based off of the categorization of this fic. :P

Many Forms of Resistance (2323 words) by faviconamalnahurriyeh
Fandom: Sociology RPF
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warning: Graphic Depictions Of Violence
Characters: C. Wright Mills, Michel Foucault
Summary:

No one had ever expected a critical theory conference to end so poorly. The worst you could usually expect was that someone would get wine thrown on them.

[personal profile] contrary 2011-09-20 11:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Random thoughts:

1) I think you're right that Matt Damon is the default emotional focus (the movie more or less begins and ends with him), but I found the time spent on each character to be balanced enough that who will end up being the emotional focus for each individual who watches is probably idiosyncratic. For me it was Jennifer Ehle (geek woman, duh) and to a lesser extent Laurence Fishburne.

2) What I think was interesting about this movie is that it didn't posit a lethal pandemic as transformational. The more I think about that, the more I think it's interesting. They did portray the breakdown of society, but they suggested that society is resilient to that in the long term. Trash piles up, riots break out - but the labs keep researching, the government is still there in the end to portion out the vaccine, and society accepts this imposition of order. The use of force becomes dodgy for a bit, but only at the margins, and in the end it's reconsolidated by the government, and the government has not used the excuse to go crazy. The movie postulates that we can face a fundamental social upheaval and come out of it still sane. I don't know if that's true, but I think it's plausible. And sweet.

3) In general, I think this is a subset of my general feelings about this movie, which is that it seemed to be coming from a basically sympathetic, humane view of humanity. Humans in this movie can be and are decent people even though they also make mistakes. (And not just in that annoying, Hollywood-redemptive "I WAS bad, but now I have seen the light and I am GOOD!" way.) I think it's note-worthy that the only really bad character in the movie, Jude Law's reporter, is also the guy that's out there trying to pillory people for showing occasional human weaknesses. Maybe being able to forgive yourself and others when you slip from the ideal is a prerequisite for staying sane and staying good in hard times? I feel like Jude Law's character is living in a post-apocalyptic movie; the rest of them are living in a medical drama.

3) The funny thing about Chin Han is that to me his face looks so trustworthy!