For viewers of a certain
age, the title The China Syndrome
recalls one of the eeriest synchronicities in the history of movie
distribution. Starring and produced by Michael Douglas, this terrific thriller
revolves around a whistleblower taking control of a nuclear power plant—as a TV
reporter and her cameraman record the unfolding crisis, the whistleblower grabs
a gun and forces a hostage situation in order to put national attention on
safety problems at the facility. Intense, smart, and topical, The China Syndrome would have been a
provocative picture in any circumstances, but an extraordinary coincidence made
the movie seem downright prescient. Twelve days after the picture opened, a
real-life accident occurred at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania,
accentuating the film’s theme about the potentially catastrophic risks of
nuclear energy.
Directed and co-written by serious-minded humanist James
Bridges, The China Syndrome works
equally well as a dramatic film and as a suspense piece. As the story
progresses, hard-driving reporter Kimberly Wells (Jane Fonda) and her
idealistic cameraman Richard Adams (Michael Douglas) shift guises several
times: They start out as observers, become opportunistic voyeurs, and finally
transform into activists once they’re terrified by the prospect of a “China
Syndrome,” a nuclear meltdown so severe that a plant’s core burrows through the entire globe. (Science tells us this eventuality is impossible,
but the notion is nonetheless a sexy scare tactic.)
The emotional heart of the
movie, of course, is Jack Lemmon’s impassioned performance as the
whistleblower, Jack Godell. A normal man pushed past his limit by his
employers’ reckless indifference, Jack represents the quiet voice of
reason exploding into scared-shitless rage, thus reflecting the tenor of
anti-nuclear activists in the era of the No Nukes benefit concerts. Bridges
channels this disquieting historical moment through meticulous storytelling,
creating a rational narrative framework that counterpoints the edgy behavior of the characters. Furthermore, the picture taps into
the conspiracy-theory vibe that permeated many grown-up ’70s flicks, and
Bridges orchestrates the work of veteran character actors—including
Wilford Brimley, James Hampton, Richard Herd, and James Karen—who balance the
stars’ more flamboyant work. Best of all, The
China Syndrome is an expertly mounted slow burn with a dynamic payoff,
since the tension Bridges generates during the climax is quite potent.
The China Syndrome: RIGHT ON
3 comments:
The film does achieve power and is far better than Mike Nichols' Silkwood which is inconclusive and somewhat tedious. This is one of Lemmon's best dramatic performances and the final scenes are genuinely unnerving.
Joseph, Lemmon's best dramatic performance was in Glengary Glen Ross.Though he really does make you feel for him in The China Syndrome.
I have this film on Indicator/Powerhouse Films' region-free British Blu-Ray, and saw it for the first time earlier this year (don't know exactly when), and I think that this and The Streets of San Francisco are the two best things that Michael Douglas ever did (don't know why I think that, but that's my opinion).
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