Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Contagion (2011)

Contagion (2011): written by Scott Z. Burns; directed by Steven Soderbergh; starring about a million people: A superior modern outbreak story that spares us people chasing a monkey around. Instead, director Soderbergh and writer Burns show us the complete spectrum of human crisis response, from riots to scientists working away desperately in labs and on the ground.

A mutated flu strain erupts in Hong Kong and soon spreads by airline to America and other places. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) mobilize, but they're in a time crunch: the new virus has a high kill rate. And it may already be mutating.

The movie follows the outbreak on various fronts, from the personal front of Matt Damon and his daughter to the professional front of scientists Laurence Fishburne, Kate Winslet, and Jennifer Ehle. Marion Cottilard leads the WHO in the field. Eliot Gould strives to map the virus at his private laboratory. Jude Law tries to make money as a muck-raking blogger who starts by questioning authority and ends by trying to make money off fake cures while also convincing the gullible to avoid any official cures. 

Contagion hurtles along, paying more attention to science and medicine than almost any movie I can remember. The scientists may be fallible, but Contagion stresses that they're also the only hope in a crisis such as this. The final revelation of the virus' origin point takes a final jab at the corporate world and, I suppose, factory farming. In any case, one of a handful of Soderbergh's best movies. Highly recommended.

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