BEFORE: It's May 1, which used to be a holiday called May Day, primarily I think it was some kind of Russian holiday? Oh, if only I hadn't just watched "The Package" two days ago, which had a lot of Soviet officials in it, and a nuclear treaty between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. I supposed I could have skipped two days and lined that film up with May 1, but then I was a bit in danger of not getting to the Mothers' Day film in time. Let's just say that two days ago, I watched my "May Day" film, OK?
I think maybe this holiday has fallen out of favor in the U.S., now it kind of goes by International Workers' Day, which is, you know, a lot easier for me to find a film that's appropriate - somebody has a job in just about any film, right?
Jurnee Smollett carries over from "The Great Debaters" and here are the rest of the links to get me to Mothers Day: Dwayne Johnson, Danny Trejo, Kelsey Grammer, Andy Daly, Kristen Bell. That's 8 more films until I break for a week, and drive down to North Carolina for a bit. I've got some options when I get back, I just haven't figured out which gets me to Memorial Day or Fathers Day or both.
THE PLOT: Prisoners participate in experiments involving mind-altering drugs.
AFTER: I could have just dropped this film, it's the middle of a three-film chain with the same actress, but I've got two films coming up in the chain that don't seem to be streaming anywhere any more, those are also middle films so I'll probably have to drop them, for now at least. So I need this one here, or I'm going to get to the Mothers' Day film too early, and I can't have that either. It's a tough dilemma, really, but I just need the count to be not too many films and not too few.
I don't really know what to do with this film, it's just kind of odd. Why does this film exist, what purpose does it serve? Is it meant to be a takedown of the pharmaceutical industry, or is it a call for prison reform, like a call to not test experimental drugs on prisoners, or something? I'll have to look this one up on Wiki to see if I can grok what its intentions were. It's not looking good, in terms of understanding it, but it seems to be based on a dystopian short story from 2010, called "Escape from Spiderhead" - what a terrible name, they really should have come up with a better name for the film, they didn't HAVE to carry over the "Spiderhead" name, which doesn't seem to mean anything.
Really it's about Big Pharma getting in bed with the incarceration industry, because prisoners are a great source of test subjects for new drugs, and here there's one drug that makes people laugh, there's another that makes them horny, and another one that induces fear and psychological pain, it's just a matter of who gets which drug at what time, and what the effects of each are, and they're all administered by packs that are strapped to the prisoner/patients' backs, and they can't reach them. Gee, what could POSSIBLY go wrong with this scenario?
Steve is the owner of the chemical company, and Jeff is one of the inmates, and Jeff's in some kind of relationship with Lizzy, a female inmate. It does seem a bit weird that the inmates have enough freedom to get together and form relationships, so they're not confined to cells, there must be some common spaces, but that implies a certain level of trust, and also it's bound to cause problems down the road. Steve loves to pair Jeff up with different women in the testing suite and administer the love drug (with consent, of course) and then watch as they both become very horny and have sex, it's all part of the test, but you get the feeling that Steve digs it. It's very awkward after the drugs wear off, though, and people who just had sex while under the influence of "Luvactin" meet in the cafeteria and no longer are attracted to each other.
But this is what Steve is supposedly there to test, are there long-term effects of the love drug that would linger after they're intimate, like would Jeff be willing to administer the "fear drug", Darkenfloxx, to one of the women that he had sex with a few days ago? Jeff's a little smarter than most, though, and in this case he chooses to not administer the drug to either of them, it sounds like he took this drug in an earlier study and had a bad reaction, which of course is the intent of the drug in the first place.
In the next test, Steve tells Jeff that he HAS to administer the fear drug to someone, and this rule came down from the head of the research department - which then becomes awkward when Jeff learns that Steve is the CEO of the drug company, and there really is no research department, other than Steve. Steve has also been self-administering the "good" drugs to himself, which itself is probably some kind of research violation, but hey, it's good to be the CEO. Jeff and Lizzy draw closer by sharing their backstories with each other, Jeff is in prison because he was driving drunk and had an accident in which his friend and girlfriend died, so that probably explains why he volunteered for the experiments, all that guilt makes him willing to sacrifice his health as a test subject, by way of making some atonement for his actions.
I'm reminded here about The Trolley Problem - perhaps it has something to do with the fact that a couple of days ago, I worked at thesis presentations from the Design Department from the college that runs the theater where I work. They had an arcade-style video game console, with games designed by some of the students, and one video-game was inspired by the Trolley Problem. If you don't know it, it's a thought experiment where you imagine a switch that controls what track a trolley will travel on - Track A will allow the trolley to run over five people who are tied to the track, but if you pull the switch, Track B will lead the trolley to run over and kill just one person tied to it, so do you pull the switch or not? Do you sacrifice one life to save five, and if so, how do you justify that? If you do nothing, five people will die but YOU did not cause their deaths, however if you pull the switch, you will have one death on your conscience, ethically are you OK with that, can you bargain/justify the taking of one life to save five others?
This is the simplest version, however there are more complex, like in one version you can pull a switch that brings the trolley on to a looped track with nobody tied to it, however you have to remain there and pull the switch every minute or so, it won't stay in the proper position, but if you leave then the trolley will go on the strait track and kill some people tied up further down. In this version, are you willing to give up YOUR life (standing there indefinitely, pulling the switch every couple of minutes) to save somebody else, however you also have to realize that you are human and fallable and eventually you will need to sleep or leave and you can't perform your duty forever. So at some point the person on the tracks will therefore die, so you might as well get it over with sooner, and get on with your life, right?
Some people use this thought experiment for various reasons, like to justify organ donation - is it right to keep a terminally ill person alive if their death now could save the lives of five people after their organs are harvested? Is it better to act and save the maximum number of lives, or to do nothing and therefore not be morally involved in the disastrous outcome. I think we're asking the wrong question entirely, like we should be asking, "Who built this crazy, unhinged trolley system in the first place?" and "Who tied all these people to the trolley tracks?" and after I pull the switch and divert the train on to Track A, can I just go and untie the one person, and save them from getting hit?" Now, from a criminal law standpoint, a failure to prevent harm is very different from actively causing it, however in certain cases defendants can still be blamed for NOT taking appropriate actions to insure other people's safety, so maybe it's worth talking about.
The whole thing in this film with the Bingo card was very bizarre, I'm not even sure I understood it, or what the implications of that are. But there is a point to all these experiments, I just don't want to reveal that here. But once Jeff sets his mind to it, he and Lizzy are able to work out an escape, they just have to fight off a bunch of other prison inmates to do it - and Steve needs to escape the prison, too, because somebody called the authorities about all the weird drug trials going on at the prison and the ethics violations taking place as part of the process. OK, good talk, but what have we proved here?
Directed by Joseph Kosinski (director of "Top Gun: Maverick" and "Only the Brave")
Also starring Chris Hemsworth (last seen in "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga"), Miles Teller (last seen in "Get a Job"), Mark Paguio, Tess Haubrich (last seen in "Alien: Covenant"), Ben Knight (last seen in "The Fall Guy"), Daniel Reader, Sam Delich, Ron Smyck (last seen in "Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire"), BeBe Bettencourt, Joey Vieira, Stephen Tongun, Nathan Jones (also last seen in "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga"), Angie Milliken (last seen in "Elvis"), Debbie Davis (ditto), Luca De Massis, Charles Parnell (last seen in "Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning"), Wyomi Reed.
RATING: 4 out of 10 jokes that really aren't very funny at all
