1 posted on
01/16/2022 4:37:14 PM PST by
DFG
To: DFG
Pay wall. can't read. But I. heard that Soylent Green is
.. people
2 posted on
01/16/2022 4:41:42 PM PST by
samkatz
To: DFG
“It’s People!” Is the Target of the Year 2022.
4 posted on
01/16/2022 4:43:40 PM PST by
Big Red Badger
(Make His Paths Straight!)
To: DFG
I wonder if the absence of tech could be explained by the overwhelming problems depicted in the movie. Seems like society was just barely hanging on.
5 posted on
01/16/2022 4:47:39 PM PST by
ealgeone
To: DFG
To: DFG
The movie's "hits" are not so profound when you consider they are and have been leftist scare tactics for 50 years, or are directly cause by leftist policies.
"Global Warming" is a profound leftist scare scam.
The problems with shanty town California are entirely self inflicted, as are the lawlessness, disorder, and income distribution. President Trump showed these are inflicted on us, not intrinsic, natural occurrences.
7 posted on
01/16/2022 4:56:21 PM PST by
marktwain
(Amazing people can read a persons entire personality and character from one photograph.)
To: DFG
Sorry, but SG is one of the least accurate SF movies I can recall.
8 posted on
01/16/2022 5:10:14 PM PST by
rbg81
To: DFG
I think they predicted $15/lb beef steak.
9 posted on
01/16/2022 5:16:19 PM PST by
Kevmo
(I’m immune from Covid since I don’t watch TV.🤗)
To: DFG
To: DFG
It wasn't literally meant to be a prediction of what life would be like in 2022. That was just a convenient date they thought was close enough in time to be like our world and far enough away to be different.
There are some similarities to the world of today, though on a smaller scale, local and temporary rather than universal and permanent -- shortages, brown-outs, civil disorder. The novel, written in 1966, could be read as a prediction of the 1970s as much as of the 2020s.
The main prediction of incredible overpopulation, didn't come true yet and probably won't, but sooner or later we may be running down the street like Charlton Heston screaming out some truth that people don't want to hear.
12 posted on
01/16/2022 5:53:02 PM PST by
x
To: DFG
I am pretty sure I walked to the theater to see this movie. Yes, it scared me.
13 posted on
01/16/2022 6:02:00 PM PST by
NetAddicted
( Just looking)
To: DFG
In its dystopia, no women are in positions of power, and the main female characters are high-priced courtesans, known by the truly objectifying term “furniture.” Probably true in the private offices of the Klaus Schwab, et al. If the Epstein/Maxwell incident taught us anything it is that the picture painted for public consumption is very different from the private reality.
15 posted on
01/16/2022 6:09:16 PM PST by
Mr. Jeeves
([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
To: DFG
Wait, wait, hold on there....Who says we don't have food made from people?


17 posted on
01/16/2022 6:15:03 PM PST by
GrandJediMasterYoda
(As long as Hillary Clinton remains free, the USA will never have equal justice under the law)
To: DFG
How can Soylent Green happen in NY when everyone knows it was turned into a prison in 1997 and Snake Plisken had to escape from it?
19 posted on
01/16/2022 6:30:17 PM PST by
The MAGA-Deplorian
( 2022 - VOTE THE BUMS OUT —— ALL OF THEM! RE-ELECT NO ONE!)
To: DFG
Edward G. Robinson’s death scene gets me every time. He was dying from cancer and only Heston knew it. A man to the very end.
To: DFG
The movie's predictions are seen to be nearly all true - if you substitute
Lagos for
New York.
Regards,
30 posted on
01/16/2022 11:27:46 PM PST by
alexander_busek
(Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson