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Movies Kelly Parks Review by
Kelly Parks
Z.P.G.
Z.P.G. - 1972
Sagittarius Productions Inc. / Paramount Pictures
Rating: USA: PG

There was a time when everyone understood that ZPG meant Zero Population Growth. And it had nothing to do with this movie.

Z.P.G. was written by Frank De Felitta (AUDREY ROSE) and Max Ehrlich (THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD) and directed by Michael Campus.

It opens with an aerial view of a city so thick with pollution as to be almost invisible. Citizens wearing gas masks walk through the endless haze.

An announcement comes from "The President of our society" (Bill Nagy: FIRST MAN INTO SPACE, GOLDFINGER, BATTLE BENEATH THE EARTH) telling the populace (through giant TV screens and floating loudspeaker drones) that the government has decided on a solution to the overpopulation problem that is destroying the Earth. There will be a thirty year moratorium on having children. Anyone who has children during that period is subject to summary execution, along with their illegal offspring, by slow public suffocation in an airtight dome.

Harsh measures and the population is none too happy, but this is clearly some Euro-police state and people do as they're told. Mostly.

*
The robot dolls seen in this movie and the mirror image film CHILDREN OF MEN, are a reality in Japan.

There they are known as the Primopuel doll (1990s) and currently as the Yumel Doll or "Healing partner", and the Snuggling Ifbot (2005). The robot dolls have a vocabulary of over 1,200 words.

Such dolls are made for old people, who would have been grandparents had they bothered to make families. The dolls are able to ask questions, like "Why do elephants have long noses?" so faux grandparents can pretend to impart their faux wisdom.

Because the population growth of Japan is 0.05, the number of old people has surpassed the ever dwindling number of young people. The robot dolls are increasing in sales and market as the Japanese slowly die off.

LINKS -

The Age
Dolls give Japanese elders a new lease on life

Khallej Times
As Japan goes grey, toy makers design dolls for the elderly

Bloomberg
Japan Toy-Makers Glimpse the Future: Talking Dolls for Grannies

Jump to eight years later. Russ McNeil (Oliver Reed: THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF, THE HOUSE OF USHER, THE BROOD, BURNT OFFERINGS) and his wife Carol (Geraldine Chaplin: THE MIRROR CRACK'D, BLOODRAYNE) are in line at the government bureau that hands out robot children* to help fulfill the need people have to be parents. At the last minute Carol changes her mind and they leave. She's deeply depressed and dissatisfied with life. Something is missing.

Russ and the couple's best friends, Edna (Diane Cilento: THE WICKER MAN) and George (Don Gordon: THE EXORCIST III, THE FINAL CONFLICT), all work together at the museum of history where they portray "typical swinger couples from 1971" in a live exhibit. After the show Carol uses the video phone to confess to her psychiatrist that she wants a baby. His reaction is to try to brain wash her out of the idea.

And it really doesn't seem like a good idea, especially after Carol witnesses an angry crowd (mostly women), shouting "Baby! Baby!", point out an offending woman to authorities. The poor woman and her child are executed on the spot and the woman who gave her up to police gets extra rations.

But you can see where this is going. Carol has her baby and she and Russ now have the near impossible job of raising a child in complete secrecy. Can they do it? And more importantly, does the story of their attempt suck?

I'll tell you that in a minute. But first it's time for a

!!!SCIENCE MOMENT!!!:
A lot of people in the 70's were very concerned about over population and the whole idea of Zero Population Growth was an often discussed potential solution. Famine and environmental disaster seemed inevitable and a lot of the sci-fi movies from this era are dystopian and downbeat (SOYLENT GREEN, for example). But if you've been paying attention you'll have noticed that in spite of there being lots more people today, none of the disasters they worried about in the 70's ever happened.

Sure, there have been famines, but only because of corrupt, incompetent governments, not because there were too many people. There are billions more people now than in the 70's and between now and then steady improvements in agricultural technology have made food nothing but cheaper and more plentiful.

This Science Moment is continued at SCIENCE MOMENT/1970s/Z.P.G.

A lot to consider, I know. So let's consider one more thing: was Z.P.G. a good movie? No, it was not. The effects are terrible, the acting wooden, the direction faulty and the cinematography barely watchable. I give it a one on the shriek girl scale.

Shriek Girls
This review copyright 2007 E.C.McMullen Jr.

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