Silkwood
Movie Review:
The
film Erin Brockovich dealt with a woman who dug for some
dirt on a chemical company's practices and discovered that
they were polluting the water so much that many citizens
were deathly ill, and ravaged with numerous forms of cancer
and other disorders. The victims were soon able to win a
large cash settlement, but the real focus of the story was
on Brockovich and her aggressive personality. Without Erin
(or Julia Roberts), there would be no movie. Silkwood is
also about a situation in which a company dealing with dangerous
material (in this case, a nuclear plant) is also corrupt
in its dealings, risking the lives of its employees, and
possibly the community. But Silkwood is the story of ordinary
people, and how one of those people reacts when discovering
the truth.
Meryl Streep plays Karen Silkwood, a employee at the nuclear
plant (which handles plutonium), who, at the beginning of
the movie, tries to maintain her personal life while working
long shifts at the plant. She is a divorcee, now living
with a new boyfriend played by Kurt Russell, and with a
lesbian friend played by Cher, and as the film begins, she
desperately tries to get a shift switched with somebody
else so she can visit her kids, who are with her ex-husband.
After giving a few sob stories, she is granted the switch
by another employee. When she returns, she learns that the
plant was closed down for the weekend due to a contamination,
and rumours abound that Karen was the culprit, for not having
been originally granted her days off from the bosses. This
turns out to be the least of her problems with the company.
Soon
Karen is contaminated, and then becomes curious, then concerned,
about how safe the plutonium really is. At the same time,
there is an upcoming vote on whether to keep the union at
the plant, and the union brings in safety experts to paint
a horrific picture of the potential dangers at the plant,
thereby ensuring a vote in favour of retaining the union.
Karen soon becomes an active member of the union, investigating
possible dangers, lies, corruption, what have you, so she
can report back to the union head office. But instead of
gaining support, she is accused by her co-workers of putting
her nose in where it doesn't belong, and possibly risking
their jobs. Her own boyfriend leaves her because he cannot
deal with his woman becoming immersed in union politics.
And the company, obviously, grows increasingly afraid.
Fans
of Brockovich may be intrigued by this movie, although the
result is something less slick and grandiose, and far more
low-key. Silkwood is much about Karen's everyday life as
it is about her investigation, and often the two sides collide.
One good thing about Silkwood is that the big movie stars
don't upstage the film's realistic environment. The story
is about average joes and janes, nobody glamourous. The
three big stars mingle with the locals as if they were part
of the town, and rarely look out of place, especially as
the direction (by Mike Nichols) takes a laid-back approach.
Cher especially looks particularly unglamourous. As with
many films of this type made during the 70's and 80's, Silkwood
resembles a documentary more than a flashy film production.
That quality may be a detriment to some, as the story meanders
along, switching back and forth between Karen's personal
life and her life at the plant, and with the union. Nothing
is solved at the end, either, as we could take it two ways.
Maybe the company was corrupt, or maybe Karen herself was
a pawn in the union's own opportunistic games. Or maybe
both. In any case, Karen was a victim of something.
The
way the film suggests the dangers in the plant is subtle
but sinister. There is something almost violating about
the showers, used to wash the contamination away from those
who come in contact. It's one thing when we see the first
person in the showers, though - at that moment, it appears
understandable that safety officials would haul her in,
strip her and scrub her down as she screams in pain - nothing
else can be done. But when Karen not once but a number of
times experiences this situation, you feel that there is
more than an unavoidable physical violation at work, especially
when she gets conflicting reports of the amount of poison
in her system. And there is also a tragic feeling when inspectors
tear apart her home, looking for the source of her most
recent contamination. You see them removing every single
object from the house, bagging it and throwing it into canisters,
and it just feels like another violation.
The
film is actually fairly ambiguous in terms of who the villains
really are. It is easy to say that the company as an entity
is the bad guy, no questions asked (Brockovich had no problem
in making that claim), but when you see all of the people
involved and exactly all of the actions they take, it is
just as possible to say that they merely follow orders,
or, in some cases, are genuinely doing their job. As far
as I'm concerned, the only real on-screen villain is Craig
T. Nelson's character, a cool, heartless-seeming individual
who has the most to lose, if it is true that he does indeed
doctor certain photographs. Even then, the actor does not
overdo the role. Maybe the character is just doing his job
as well, and doesn't want to lose it. And it is not as if
the union is pure as the driven snow either. Of course,
they will never say that the company does anything properly,
because then what use would the union be? And Karen actually
has an affair with one of the head members (Ron Silver),
which, obviously, further drives a wedge between her and
Russell.
Silkwood
is often too laid-back to feel very powerful or assertive,
but, then again, the movie is meant to be a portrait of
regular people, not a simplistic good-guy/bad-guy morality
tale. There is a lot to think about in this movie, but don't
expect it to give you any easy answers.
David
Macdonald
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of Silkwood and intellectual copyright holders of the
movies mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie,
characters, merchandise & storyline.