Soylent Green
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
Soylent Green
We decided to do an art car having to do with the movie "Soylent Green".
Of course we'll be passing out Soylent Green and hopefully meet other Soylent Green fans on the playa on a certain date and time for riot and body cleanup.
check out the 1972 movie sometime.
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In 2022, New York City is populated with 40 million people, half of whom are unemployed. The air is smoggy and sooty, and the sun bakes everything, everyday, at 90 degrees. Overpopulation and the destruction of the environment may have rendered human life cheap, but food--that is, real food--is quite expensive. A jar of real strawberry jam costs $150, if it's available--supermarkets don't exist anymore. The government now dispenses rations of food substances made by the Soylent corporation: Soylent Yellow, Soylent Red, and the newest product, Soylent Green.
But even these Soylent products are in short supply. Riot police are always dispatched when Soylent is distributed, because violence kicks in when the food runs out. Thorn (Heston) is a member of this modern, beleaguered police force, which pilfers every crime scene for the necessities of life. When Thorn is called in to investigate the death of a Soylent Corporation executive, his take is a treasure trove: a towel, a bar of soap, paper, and some real food--celery, a couple of apples, and half a pound of beef.
But what at first seems to Thorn a clumsy robbery soon seems a highly-managed assassination. But ironically, it is the death of Thorn's aging friend, Sol (Robinson), one of the few who still remembered what food was, what plenty meant, that cracks the case and unmasks a conspiracy. It is only through Sol's death that Thorn understands what the world has lost and what it has become...
HOPE...FEAR.... The FUTURE
Of course we'll be passing out Soylent Green and hopefully meet other Soylent Green fans on the playa on a certain date and time for riot and body cleanup.
check out the 1972 movie sometime.
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In 2022, New York City is populated with 40 million people, half of whom are unemployed. The air is smoggy and sooty, and the sun bakes everything, everyday, at 90 degrees. Overpopulation and the destruction of the environment may have rendered human life cheap, but food--that is, real food--is quite expensive. A jar of real strawberry jam costs $150, if it's available--supermarkets don't exist anymore. The government now dispenses rations of food substances made by the Soylent corporation: Soylent Yellow, Soylent Red, and the newest product, Soylent Green.
But even these Soylent products are in short supply. Riot police are always dispatched when Soylent is distributed, because violence kicks in when the food runs out. Thorn (Heston) is a member of this modern, beleaguered police force, which pilfers every crime scene for the necessities of life. When Thorn is called in to investigate the death of a Soylent Corporation executive, his take is a treasure trove: a towel, a bar of soap, paper, and some real food--celery, a couple of apples, and half a pound of beef.
But what at first seems to Thorn a clumsy robbery soon seems a highly-managed assassination. But ironically, it is the death of Thorn's aging friend, Sol (Robinson), one of the few who still remembered what food was, what plenty meant, that cracks the case and unmasks a conspiracy. It is only through Sol's death that Thorn understands what the world has lost and what it has become...
HOPE...FEAR.... The FUTURE
- theCryptofishist
- Posts: 40312
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- Location: In Exile
Make Room! Make Room!
Omigawd, Soylent Green is one of my fave movies. I especially like the retro-future game consoles: white molded plastic apparently loaded with a crappy 2-dimensional version of Asteroidz. Ohh, the Future is scary!
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
Live Free, Die Happy
What about a euthansia room like the one Edward G. Robinson visited? It'd be a nice place for people to relax...forever!
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
A chamber LIKE the euthenasia facility could be an interesting experience...Participants enter on a motorized cart and roll through a dome filled with music, projections, tactile stimulation and such. And then proceed to the Afterlife Lounge for refreshments! It could be set up like an amusement park "dark ride"....
The scary thing about those "retro" game consoles that KayTwo noticed is that I remember them as "state of the art" arcade fixtures. (My lifeclock went black some time ago.)
The scary thing about those "retro" game consoles that KayTwo noticed is that I remember them as "state of the art" arcade fixtures. (My lifeclock went black some time ago.)
Howdy From Kalamazoo
AWESOME.AntiM wrote:We're already thinking of baking green snacks to hand out now and again. Green of course. Rice Crispy treats? Shortbread cookies?
I'd make some kind of flatbread or crackerlike something, just so it's just unrecognizable enough to introduce a bit of uncertainty...Green-dyed "Chik'n In A Biskit" crackers? Does "people" taste like chicken? Sheets of Nori?
Hand out on Tuesday, wearing Tyvek suits and masks.
Howdy From Kalamazoo
- AntiM
- Moderator
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Raw dough is easier to dye than post-baked goods. I have cracker reciipes, but haven't developed a good touch with them yet. I could mark or stamp shortbread; "It's People." Unsubtle, but makes me chuckle. I'm also thinking of durability, and wrapping vs naked cookies.
The trick for a good deep color is to use the paste decorating dyes rather than the liquid dyes found in supermarkets. Stains everything, which sucks unless you want green skin for a while.
The trick for a good deep color is to use the paste decorating dyes rather than the liquid dyes found in supermarkets. Stains everything, which sucks unless you want green skin for a while.
- Discosybil
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- Location: Kansas?
- theCryptofishist
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- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
I love the idea of Nori. Soylent Green Crunchy Snackables! Kids love 'em!robotland wrote:...Sheets of Nori?
Hand out on Tuesday, wearing Tyvek suits and masks...
I, too, was also thinking of Tyvek suits. Emblazoned, of course, with the Soylent Green Biscuit Company logo. Wouldn't want other Burners to question the quality of the product we're handing out.

- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
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- Camp Name: Elliot's naked bycycel repair
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- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
- Discosybil
- Posts: 154
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2004 9:00 am
- Location: Kansas?
Kay Two, I keep hearing about all these movies and wonder if it would all work. Like "Stepford Wives" passing out soylent green for snacks, or when people come in to the shade for rest to listen to music they would instead watch violent movies like in "Clockwork Orange" maybe making them glad they are going to pass on.
Hmmmmm! I'm soooo confused
Hmmmmm! I'm soooo confused
Discosybil,
I like the idea of cross-pollination of movies, but take care to not get too ambitious and muddy up the concept. The Stepford Wives is a great idea, it blends well with Soylent Green's views of consumerism (pun intended). Clockwork Orange visuals, I think, would dilute what is, in my opinion, the creepiest scene in SG: the old man going do die in a room surrounded by beautiful scenes of nature.
And do we really want to encourage people to leave before they're processed? Seems like a waste of product.
I like the idea of cross-pollination of movies, but take care to not get too ambitious and muddy up the concept. The Stepford Wives is a great idea, it blends well with Soylent Green's views of consumerism (pun intended). Clockwork Orange visuals, I think, would dilute what is, in my opinion, the creepiest scene in SG: the old man going do die in a room surrounded by beautiful scenes of nature.
And do we really want to encourage people to leave before they're processed? Seems like a waste of product.
The Biggest Little Blog In The World
http://mylifeinreno.wordpress.com
http://mylifeinreno.wordpress.com
Ever since seeing Soylent Green for the first time, (possibly in the theater...can't remember!) I can't hear Beethoven's Pastoral without seeing Edward G. Robinson crying over poppy fields. Really stuck with me. I grew up on a pine tree farm, and got a heavy dose of ecology at a young age. Movies featuring vast natural devestation really get me, even if they're corny at points, like "Silent Running". (I still want to live in a domed forest, with robot friends....)
Howdy From Kalamazoo
- theCryptofishist
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You might want to cross reference with Apokaliptika. "You're doomed--to be eaten" is the slogan I suggest!KayTwo wrote: And do we really want to encourage people to leave before they're processed? Seems like a waste of product.
The Lady with a Lamprey
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
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theCryptofishist wrote:You might want to cross reference with Apokaliptika. "You're doomed--to be eaten" is the slogan I suggest!KayTwo wrote: And do we really want to encourage people to leave before they're processed? Seems like a waste of product.
¿
ROTFLMAO
I'm the contraptioneer your mother warned you about.
- Discosybil
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