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People were already wary about trying an unfamiliar "food" that contains what the company calls"renewable algae sources," seemingly named after the '70s science fiction film Soylent Green ...
The Hollywood Reporter In the final sequence, the movie conjures up a dark reveal: Soylent Green isn’t made from sea plankton, as the other Soylent products are. As Heston bellows in the film ...
With a twinkle in his eye, a sly smile on his face and barely a word of explanation uttered, my dad popped the "Soylent Green" VHS tape into our VCR and quietly watched the movie with me.
This post contains spoilers for "Soylent Green" and its source material. Richard Fleischer's 1973 dystopian sci-fi classic, "Soylent Green," ends with a shocking revelation. Set in a future ...
"Soylent Green is peeeeeooooople!" I've used that phrase as a punchline for too many casual jokes over the years. Mystery food in a cafeteria? "It's people!" Mushy peas on a visit to England?
The resulting film, Soylent Green, was one of the first ecological dystopian horror movies. It still packs something of a punch too, since key elements of the argument remain in our current debate.
But in the early 1970s, one classic sci-fi film refined this tradition of twists like no other: Soylent Green. Before Star Wars changed everything in 1977, most serious science fiction movies were ...