One of the few genuine
Renaissance men of 20th-century popular culture, Michael Crichton was a
doctor-turned-novelist who leveraged his literary success for a lucrative film
career as a screenwriter and occasional director. Every facet of his
professional identity came together for Coma,
his biggest hit as a director: Set in the medical milieu, the thriller features
Crichton’s signature style of provocative science fiction. Ironically, however,
he didn’t originate the story. Crichton adapted the film from a novel by
another doctor-turned-author, Robin Cook. Yet Crichton’s distance from the
material was probably a good thing, since his characters and plots often fell short
of his wonderful ideas; perhaps owing to its mixed authorship, Coma has one of the smoothest narratives
of any of Crichton’s film projects.
The heroine of the piece is Dr. Susan
Wheeler (Geneviève Bujold), a surgical resident who uncovers a bizarre conspiracy.
It seems an abnormal number of healthy young patients at Boston Memorial
Hospital are falling into inexplicable comas during routine surgical
procedures. When Susan’s friend Nancy (Lois Chiles) becomes the latest victim,
Susan investigates—despite stern warnings from her boss, Chief of Surgery Dr.
George Harris (Richard Widmark), to stop snooping. Additionally, Susan doesn’t
get much support from her on-again/off-again boyfriend, Dr. Mark Bellows
(Michael Douglas). A self-absorbed chief resident who condescendingly belittles
Susan’s theories, Mark believes Dr. Harris’ appraisal that Susan has succumbed
to grief and stress. Alas, Susan’s fears prove justified, because she unearths
an insidious connection between Boston Memorial and a mysterious facility
called the Jefferson Institute. Before long, the movie accelerates into full-on
thriller mode, with a hired killer (Lance LeGault) chasing after Susan to keep
her from sharing the explosive truth she’s discovered.
Layered with details
about the medical profession that give a strong sense of credibility, Coma is a tight and focused film with
carefully modulated suspense elements. The character work is a bit on the
rudimentary side, and some supporting players—including Elizabeth Ashley, who
plays a nurse at the Jefferson Institute—merely deliver exposition. Still, the
piece has a great look, with interesting settings such as the tunnels beneath
and within a hospital, and Bujold’s chilly screen persona keeps things from
getting too melodramatic. Douglas contrasts her reserved quality with his
hot-blooded leading-man charisma, and Widmark, as always, makes a memorable
prick. (Watch for future stars Ed Harris, Tom Selleck, and Rip Torn in small
roles.) The ending is a bit hackneyed, but the vibe of Coma is so consistently creepy, and the execution of the movie is so
slick, that Coma is thoroughly
enjoyable escapism.
Coma:
GROOVY
2 comments:
So happy you thought this movie rated a Groovy, I totally agree. I am a big fan of Ms. Bujold (and the strong feminist character she plays here), and of Crichton's restrained direction. I also enjoyed the book it was based on.
COMA delivers on its promise of thrills in spite of a few flaws: Genevieve Bujold is completely miscast as a woman named Susan Wheeler; that French accent of hers is a terrible distraction. Also she and Michael Douglas have ZERO chemistry together.
Having said that, it still manages to work, probably because the script and the direction are so on point.
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