Wikipedia has a page listing “films about viral outbreaks.” I count 134 titles. Obviously, the theme has legs.
A
few of the more famous movies: I am Legend; The Omega Man; The
Andromeda Strain; Outbreak; Maze Runner: The Death Cure; Resident Evil:
Apocalypse; Contagion.
My overall review: ridiculous plots; fear porn; softens up the public to accept the notion of pandemics.
Manufacturing
134 movies on the same subject, you can sell almost anything. Zombies,
toasters, alarm clocks that have long noses, golf balls from Mars, cave
women with flawless teeth and perfect makeup and salon-sculptured hair
and carefully engineered cleavage.
But in this case, it’s viruses.
At
rwjf[dot]org, there’s an interesting interview with Scott Burns, who
wrote the screenplay for the 2011 film, Contagion, and the technical
consultant on the project, Dr. Ian Lipkin, director of the Center for
Infection and Immunity at Columbia University. Here are excerpts:
Scott
Burns: “Obviously I worked with Ian, and early on I also met Dr. Larry
Brilliant, who was very helpful [and certainly brilliant]. I had seen
Larry’s TED talk where he showed the Malthusian charge through the world
the virus would have. I also worked with Laurie Garrett on the movie,
because she had written this book, The Coming Plague, which was very,
very useful to me in sort of teasing out how these things have a medical
component, but they also have a social justice component and a
political component and all sorts of interesting aspects of human
behavior.”
Dr.
Ian Lipkin: “I started very early with Scott. There were a lot of
people who contributed---CDC, WHO and others... Scott would bounce ideas
off of me and others in his ‘brain trust’ and most of the time we were
in accord. My role grew dramatically over the course of production. It
began with just a consultation, and then I rapidly moved into helping
the set designer in designing the virus, and we had a few days where we
had actors come to the lab and spend some time working at the bench,
learning how to pipette and look through microscopes and get into gowns
and such. And even at the very end, I was working with the sound
engineer, recording sound for the movie---lab background and that sort
of thing. I did a lot of traveling with the crew. It was like a circus.”
“We
settled on that virus [a paramyxovirus] within the first half an hour
with Laurie and Scott and I, high above Columbus Circle in New York. We
threw out a number of possibilities to Scott and he batted them down,
and then one came to mind that struck me as the perfect choice, simply
because there had been some reports earlier suggesting this virus, which
wasn’t readily transmissible, had become readily transmissible to
humans---that was Nipah. It also gave Scott and the director and actors
an opportunity to do more than just cough and die. They could develop
seizures, they could have hallucinations---all sorts of things that were
much more interesting than a standard respiratory disease. We settled
on that really within the first thirty minutes, and then Scott went
back, thought about it and decided it was a good way to run. It doesn’t
take much fuel for him to run quite a distance.”
Turns
out that designing a movie about a pandemic is pretty much the same
sort of project as designing a fake COVID pandemic in the world.
You pick out a story about a virus, give it an authentic feel, embroider it, and sell it.
People buy it.
In the interest of balance and fairness, I’ve written a few notes for a screenplay that would take a different approach:
In New York, the body of a dead virologist floats to the surface of the East River.
After
a brief round of speculation that he might have perished from a
mysterious viral infection, the coroner announces the cause of death was
three gunshot wounds to the head.
A
lone NYPD detective (divorced, alcoholic, disparaged by fellow
officers, heroic) discovers the dead virologist’s notebook inside the
freezer in the virologist’s apartment.
He
thaws it out and reads this: “The coronavirus has never been
isolated. It’s a fake. They’re selling a fairy tale about a virus.”
Two
days later, a beautiful woman doctor (with engineered cleavage) from
the CDC shows up at the detective’s apartment. Somehow she knows the cop
has found the virologist’s notebook.
They
talk. The mutual attraction should be immediately evident. If not, the
brief cuts of sex they’re having on the floor provide sufficient
evidence for the audience.
Two days later, the beautiful CDC doctor disappears.
The police detective is warned (anonymous phone message) to stay away from the case of the dead virologist.
Hey, it’s a B movie. Low budget. Could shoot the whole thing over a weekend in Manhattan.
But we need some kind of twist.
So
it turns out the detective, the dead virologist, and the beautiful
woman doctor from the CDC are just story ideas in the mind of a
screenwriter, who, in the movie, is pitching the project to producers in
an office high above Columbus Circle.
He’s pitching a movie that exposes a fake virus and a fake pandemic.
But
wait. There’s more. In a mind-bending revelation, we learn that the
screenwriter and the producers are secret agents from a distant planet
called PROPAGANDA.
They’ve
come to Earth to promote a fake pandemic…but a conflict has developed
among them. The screenwriter has decided he wants to blow the whistle on
his bosses from PROPAGANDA, and the producers want to carry out their
mission to sell the people of Earth fake COVID-19, as if it were real.
The movie is basically an extended conversation about fake vs. real, virus vs. no virus, pandemic vs. hoax.
As
the screenwriter earnestly pitches his film, his ideas will come to
life, briefly, on the screen: there’s enough cleavage, sex, and murder
to satisfy the Hollywood code.
Will
the agents from the planet PROPAGANDA succeed in selling Earth the
notion that COVID is real? Or will the heroic defector, the
screenwriter, succeed in foiling the whole operation?
Stay tuned…
The
134 Hollywood movies about outbreaks of viruses aren’t only programming
audiences. They’re instruction manuals for planners who launch fake
pandemics.
Definition
of “fake pandemic”: a movie that is happening in the world, not on a
screen, in which the suffering and the pain are REAL---but are not the
result of a virus. For further reference, see “lockdowns, mask mandates,
business bankruptcies, suicides, vaccine damage, police state, and true
believers (e.g., deranged hostile masked vegan Whole Foods shoppers,
so-called science bloggers living in mommy’s basement, etc.).”
Definition of “virus”: any presumed particle that has never been isolated.
Definition of “virologist”: any person on the payroll of Bill Gates or entities Gates funds.
Alternate
definition of “fake pandemic”: any medical event involving large
numbers of people that never ends. For further reference, see “keep
wearing two masks after being vaccinated.”
Immortal quotes from Hollywood virus-movies:
Outbreak,
Dustin Hoffman---“I'll say it one last time. These [infected] people
that you're going to bomb are not the enemy. We can kill the virus
without killing these people. I swear on my soul that the President does
not have the facts. He doesn't know we have a working serum
[antidote].”
Contagion, Jennifer Ehle---“Somewhere in the world, the wrong pig met up with the wrong bat.”
I
Am Legend, Will Smith--- “Blood tests confirm that I am immune to both
the airborne and contact strains…Vaccine trials continue, I'm still
unable to transfer my immunity to infected hosts. The Krippen Virus
is... elegant…Hmm, a behavioral note, um, an infected male exposed
himself to sunlight today. Now, it's possible decreased brain function
or the growing scarcity of food is causing them to...ignore their basic
survival instincts. Social de-evolution appears complete. Typical human
behavior is now entirely absent.”
Would you buy a used car from these people?
(The link to this article posted on my blog is here -- with sources.)
(Follow me on Gab at @jonrappoport)
No comments:
Post a Comment