Very much a product of the
same anxious zeitgeist that generated Silent
Running (1972) and Soylent Green (1973), as well as other cautionary tales with environmental themes,
this downbeat and sl0w-moving sci-fi saga concerns a dystopian future in which man has so
completely overrun the earth that the planet’s governments establish a 30-year
ban on childbirth. Concurrently, pollution has become so horrific that entire
cities are shrouded 24/7 with suffocating smog, and it’s become impossible to
grow organic materials, so neither animals nor plants exist. The story’s
protagonists, Carol McNeil (Geraldine Chaplin) and her husband Russ (Oliver
Reed), work in a museum, where they perform re-creations of domestic scenes
from the 20th century inside living dioramas. While some couples in this
ugly future society have purchased the only legal substitutes for
children—lifelike robot babies—the McNeils want more, even though the penalty
for childbirth is death. At Carol’s desperate urging, Russ agrees to start a
family. Once Carol becomes pregnant, Russ fabricates a marital separation as a
cover story before hiding Carol in an underground bunker until she delivers her
baby.
The plot twists that follow, depicting the McNeils’ efforts to hide their
secret from curious neighbors and prying government operatives, are fairly
clever even though a lot of what happens in Z.P.G.
(abbreviated from the government policy of Zero
Population Growth) is logically dubious. Made in the UK and written by
Frank De Felitta and Max Ehrlich (who also wrote the strange 1974 George
C. Scott drama The Savage Is Loose), Z.P.G. features imaginative
gadgets (such as the clear masks that citizens must wear while walking around
smog-choked streets) and unnerving manifestations of totalitarianism (notably a
high-tech torture chamber that feels like a precursor for a similar chamber in
the 1976 sci-fi classic Logan’s Run). Unfortunately, neither the dramaturgy nor the performances rise to the level of
the concepts. Chaplin’s acting is fidgety but icy, and Reed plays so many of
his scenes with a stone face that he barely seems present, much less
emotionally involved. Combined with long stretches of
repetitive scenes, the inert acting makes the first hour of Z.P.G. very slow going. And while things
pick up somewhat in the second half, when characters played by Diane Cliento
and Don Gordon emerge as unlikely villains, the movie runs off the rails again
during the ludicrous climax.
Z.P.G.:
FUNKY
1 comment:
Just saw this for the first time on Criterion, worth watching if for nothing else but the library scene!
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