I had never seen this 1973 sci-fi classic, but like many people, I did know what the punch line to the movie was, but I will give no spoilers here, not even for a fifty-three year old movie. I recorded it off of TCM the other day and watched it over the weekend.
The movie takes place in "the future", when the world has been over populated (New York City alone has a population of 50 million people) and the entire world is an environmental disaster. There is no food, no shelter, and people have devolved into savages. Oh, and the future year in which this dystopian disaster has befallen: 2022!!
Charleston Heston in full lock-jawed intensity plays a NYC cop who is trying to solve the homicide of the Chairman of the Soylent Corporation, the firm that provides the world's only food source. That product, Soylent, comes in many colors, but its newest product, "soylent green", made from sea plankton, is the best of the lot, but it is still severely rationed and its scarcity is causing riots among the population. It is a very grim world, this world of 2022.
Actually, director, Richard Fleischer does a great job in painting the picture of this dystopian (yeah, I've now used this world twice, but it is such a cool word to use) landscape. For that reason, this is a pretty neat movie to watch. Another reason to watch is the cast. In addition to Heston, it included.....
Edward G. Robinson. Robinson was eighty years old and suffering from cancer when he made this final film appearance. He died shortly after the movie wrapped up filming. Heston later said that being able to act "with Eddie" made this movie one of the most special of his career. Robinson's presence alone may make this worth watching.
Leigh Taylor-Young. Miss Taylor-Young was all of 28 years old when she made this movie. She appeared in television's Peyton Place (she replaced Mia Farrow). married co-star Ryan O'Neal, and was quite the thing in the early 1970's. She was quite beautiful, but I had long since forgotten her. She is now 81 years old, lives in Washington DC, and has worked regularly right through 2024. Good for her.
Joseph Cotten, was 68 years old when he made this one and his role was brief. He was the Soylent Chairman who got bumped off early in the picture.
Chuck Connors. Television's Rifleman and ex-Brooklyn Dodger and ex-Boston Celtic was 52 years old when he made this. Connors was only 71 when he died in 1992, and he had amassed 221 acting credits in a career that lasted right up until the year of his death.
Whit Bissell. Was there ever a character actor with a better name than "Whit Bissell"? Bissell died in 1996 at the age of 86 and had an astonishing 349 acting credits to his name in IMDB. As I often say, Stars are Stars, but you can't make movies without guys like Whit Bissell.
Other notable actors that appeared in "Soylent Green" were Brock Peters, Paula Kelly, Dick Van Patten, and ex-Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Henry.
"Soylent Green" was a 1970's era Message Movie, and while it may have been ham-handed in some aspects of delivering that message, it was still fun to watch. Again, I'm not going to give away the ending, but if someone offers you a tasty snack of soylent green, you might want to take a pass on it.
Surprisingly, Three Stars from The Grandstander.






















