The virus of âContagionâ: What are moviegoers really scared of?
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Is it really a big surprise to discover that while America is enduring its worst economic downturn in 70 years and experiencing a paroxysm of partisan political infighting that the No. 1 movie last weekend was âContagion,â which depicts a planet overwhelmed by a mysterious virus threatening the lives of millions? When people are beset by anxiety, they often turn to movies that allow them a vicarious release. As the crafty marketers at Warner Bros. put it on their movie poster: âNothing Spreads Like Fear.â
It is probably no coincidence that these times of economic gloom and doom have also spawned a wave of alien invader films, including such hits as âDistrict 9,â âBattle: Los Angelesâ and âSuper 8.â There is more to come, with a remake of âThe Thingâ arriving in theaters next month. Of course, itâs easy to shrug off an alien invasion as a popcorn fantasy. What makes âContagionâ so potent is its knockout punch of plausibility â the movieâs story is so deeply rooted in actual scientific research that screenwriter Scott Z. Burns, who began writing the movie several years ago, held off finishing the script until he could follow the outcome of the 2009 swine flu epidemic.
What I found most intriguing about the Steven Soderbergh movie was how closely it resembled âPanic in the Streets,â an equally unsettling thriller made in 1950 by the fabled Elia Kazan. Shot on location in New Orleans with boogie-woogie piano and blowzy jazz blaring in every dockside cafe, âPanic in the Streetsâ is about the desperate efforts of a public health officer, played by Richard Widmark, to stop the spread of pneumonic plague before it infects the cityâs populace and perhaps the entire world.
Photos: Matt Damon, Marion Cotillard and Michael Douglas at the âContagionâ premiere
Although the movies are separated by 60 years and all sorts of scientific advances, they have a lot in common, both in terms of what they tell us about their filmmakers and the eras when they were made.
Though we look back at it as a time of tranquillity, we were equally alarmed at the dawn of the 1950s, when America was unnerved by Cold War anxieties sparked by the spread of communism throughout Asia and Eastern Europe. Just as âContagionâ arrived in the same year as a host of alien invader films, âPanic in the Streetsâ came at roughly the same time as a string of paranoid thrillers, including 1949âs âDOAâ and 1951âs âThe Thing From Another World.â
By the time âPanic in the Streetsâ was released, Hollywood was in turmoil as well. The era of loyalty oaths and House Committee on Un-American Activities investigations had arrived, with stars and filmmakers forced to disassociate themselves from any links with left-wing activities. This hit especially close to home for Kazan, a onetime communist whoâd just finished making a number of unabashedly socially conscious films. When Cecil B. DeMille tried in 1950 to pass a Directors Guild bylaw that would institute a loyalty oath for the guild, it was Kazan who helped edit the speech delivered by guild chief Joseph Mankiewicz that turned the tide against DeMilleâs crusade.
One of the best performances in âPanic in the Streetsâ is delivered by Zero Mostel, who was already in trouble for his associations with left-wing organizations. Kazan told 20th Century Fox that he wouldnât make the film without Mostel, who was later named as a communist at a HUAC hearing and didnât work again in the movies until the mid-1960s. (Kazan himself became a pariah with the Hollywood left for naming names when he testified before Congress in 1952.)
Made in such an anxious time, âPanic in the Streetsâ shares a number of affinities with âContagion.â Both movies feature unflappable health officials â Widmark in âPanic,â Laurence Fishburne in âContagionâ â who are flawed heroes, each man making mistakes of judgment during the crush of crisis. Both films show the press covering the epidemic but in ways that offer very different perceptions of the media. The reporter character in âPanicâ is just a working stiff doing his job. In âContagion,â the media character is far more unsympathetic, a reckless tech blogger, played by Jude Law, who posts preposterous half-truths and promotes a worthless herb as a virus antidote.
The movies are products of their times. âPanic in the Streetsâ reflects a post-World War II liberal ideal. Even though Widmark, as a college-educated health officer, initially clashes with the blue-collar New Orleans police captain overseeing the case, the men overcome their differences and work together to squelch the outbreak. Although it would be a stretch to call âContagionâ a âtea partyâ movie, it does reflect much of todayâs anti-government and anti-corporate sentiment.
After all, Gwyneth Paltrow, who is the movieâs Patient Zero, works for the sort of soulless global conglomerate that you can imagine taking American jobs overseas to places like Hong Kong, where the contagion begins. It is also telling that in the frenzied scramble to identify the virus, the person who finally hits pay dirt is not a government expert but an independent virologist.
As artists, Soderbergh and Kazan have a lot in common, both being fiercely personal filmmakers who managed to craft enough hits to survive in Hollywood. Although Soderbergh launched the indie film movement with âSex, Lies, and Videotape,â most of his idiosyncratic films since (âSolaris,â âBubbleâ and âThe Girlfriend Experienceâ) have been so chilly that they have rarely connected with anyone outside of a few art-house cognoscenti. His most assured work has been Hollywood genre fare, notably the thriller âOut of Sight,â the star-studded âOceanâsâ heist series, the uplifting âErin Brockovichâ and now âContagion.â
Kazan was as critically respected as Soderbergh when he made âPanic in the Streets,â perhaps even more so, since he was also the countryâs top theater director at the time. But the film marked a breakthrough for Kazan, not only because it introduced him to the streetwise energy of location shooting that he later used to great effect in âOn the Waterfront,â but it inspired him to embrace the same kind of genre filmmaking that has inspired Soderberghâs best work.
As Kazan told writer-producer Jeff Young in the book âThe Master Director Discusses His Films,â âI decided that since âPanicâ wasnât deep psychologically, not to pretend that it was. It was a big lesson to me. Thatâs what hamminess is, pretending there is more in something than there really is. Thereâs no harm in saying, âThis isnât very deep. It has other virtues. It has lightness of foot, it has surprise, it has suspense, itâs engaging.â â
Six decades later, âPanic in the Streetsâ remains just as engaging as âContagion,â in part because it was intended as suspenseful entertainment, not message-oriented drama. The movies that linger the longest in our imagination are the ones in which the messages are buried beneath the surface. We are afraid, very afraid today â of losing our jobs, of living in a country caught in a downward spiral. When we see movies like âContagionâ or âPanic in the Streets,â where people work together to defeat an insidious virus, it gives us a dose of optimism about fending off all the other insidious forces at work in our lives. At the movies, the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
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Hollywood is being invaded by...alien invader movies
--Patrick Goldstein