Ah, Hollywood
From the Publisher's Weekly review of P.D. James' Children of Men (emphasis mine):
Near the end of the 20th century, for reasons beyond the grasp of modern science, human sperm count went to zero.From the trailer for Alfonso Cuáron's upcoming adaptation of Children of Men, spoken by Michael Caine's character (again, emphasis mine):
"The ultimate mystery--why are women infertile?"
Comments
Gotcha.
From the trailer, the film looks great, but it doesn't give me a lot of hope that its second half isn't just a lot of running from the baddies.
Lisa
I can't say that I'm looking forward to this film, Fred. I love Clive Owen and Julianne Moore and Chiwetel Ejiofor, but the trailer makes the film look simplistic and unconvincing in its central conceit. Plus, I'm made nervous by the fact that the pregnant woman doesn't get any lines.
S
And it's a great movie. I didn't realize just how great until it was almost over, but if you ever want a reason to dismiss the Academy Awards, look no further than that Children of Men did not win Best Cinematography.
I think that's highly debatable. Male fertility is much more strongly tied to our culture's perception of masculinity than female fertility is to femininity. There's a stigma attached to having 'slow swimmers' that doesn't have a female analogue.
At any rate, Children of Men doesn't have female protagonists to embody this alleged loss of self-image through infertility. Julian is killed off rather early on, and Kee is more of a plot device - a McGuffin, as you put it - than a character. If the filmmakers were trying to tie the film's emotional core to infertility, rather than, as they end up doing, to childlessness (and therefore future-lessness), they would have stuck with male infertility in order to take advantage of the angst it would cause Theo.
In spite of my annoyance at this deviation from the book, I quite liked Children of Men. Though, as I've said before, it's an intelligently-made film, but not an intelligent one. As you say, its greatest accomplishments are visual.
To put it glibly, the woman needs a big hug, and probably more than one. The guy just needs another beer.
To put it glibly, the woman needs a big hug, and probably more than one. The guy just needs another beer.
That's not so much glib as so grossly over-generalized as to have only an incidental relationship with the truth.
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