The China Syndrome - Yes, Let’s Build More “Nucular” Power Plants Part II
Written: Jul 23 '05 (Updated Jul 23 '05)
Product Rating:
Pros: great acting, well paces & tightly written story
Cons: a little dated, power plant story overshadows secondary story about sexism in the media
The Bottom Line: Watch this movie and see if you trust human nature to put human safety above the greed of making more money, especially in today's pro-corporate climate.
Plot Details: This opinion reveals major details about the movie''s plot.
Ive heard people lately - mainly those lobbying for us to start building atomic energy plants again - stating that Three Mile Island was proof that all of the safeguards at the plants worked. I say they were damn lucky.
The China Syndrome was released in the U.S. just two weeks before this accident occurred. The title refers to what happens when the core is exposed and the fuel overheats, melting through the bottom of the plant. When it hits groundwater it releases radioactive steam and would render an area (the size of Pennsylvania - those words are used in all ironies) uninhabitable.
Jane Fonda is Kimberly Wells, a fluff-piece reporter at a local Los Angeles television station. Shes sent with her cameraman, Richard (Michael Douglas), out to cover the Ventana Nuclear Power Plant as part of a series about energy in California. While they are there, they experience what they at first believe to be an earthquake. Unbeknownst to anyone, Richard keeps his camera covertly rolling. They arent sure exactly what happened, but they both seem to know instinctively that it wasnt good.
When they arrive back at the station, Kimberly is eager to roll with the story as the lead story, but its killed. Richard steals the footage and takes it to hearings being held on the opening of a second plant to get input from nuclear specialists.
Jack Lemmon is plant manager Jack Godell. Ive come across three types of people in this world. There are people who just blindly believe that everything in the world will work out good (at least for them). There are people who believe in what they are told until they see different for themselves, and there are people who are just by nature suspicious of whats presented to them. Jack Godell seems to fit into the second category. He completely believes in the use of nuclear power. That is, until something nags at him about the incident at the plant. He begins poking around and comes across some things that bother him - water leaking in an area that it shouldnt; x-rays of welds that just show the same weld over and over again. The question is - why is he investigating this when others arent? The people he is clashing with are all the first type of people; they believe that nothing bad will happen despite the fact that there have been shortcuts taken with the building of the plant that theyve known about for years. You would think that these people who have to live in the same area where this plant is and are exposed to the same level of danger would want to make sure that they and their families are as safe as can be, but they seem to live in the fantasy world where bad things can never happen to them; where things just cant go wrong on the grand scale that those of us who live in the real world know they can.
The story is terrific as it builds to the climax. What was strange was just how similar to the events of Three Mile Island this film was. No, there were no faulty welds at Three Mile Island, but the accident there was similar to what is depicted in The China Syndrome. If that wasnt enough alone to catapult this film to the notoriety it received, the performances themselves are really terrific. Its tightly written at a good pace without dumbing itself down to the audience.
I grew to like the character of Jack Godell quite a bit. Jack Lemmon did a terrific job with him. Hes not got the hysterics of someone whos against nuclear power as he believes in the job hes doing. However, at the same time he has a conscience and is willing to call out those he thinks are putting the public at risk. Lemmon portrays Godell as intensely conflicted and does it well. I thought his performance was probably the best of the film. He really brought out the human qualities to him without overplaying who he is.
The story that got lost in all of the fracas surrounding this once Three Mile Island broke is the story of what it was like to be a female reporter at that time in this country, and it really wasnt all that long ago. As Kimberly Wells, Jane Fonda is given mostly fluff pieces about singing telegrams, a tiger having a birthday party. Her bosses comment on her hairstyle and tell her not to worry her pretty little head about such matters.
Fonda does a terrific job as Wells. Shes been hired based on how she tested with the audience. Shes even called a performer at one point. What she wants to do is hardcore reporting. What shes assigned is something entirely different. Shes hungry for more than shes been given while trying to tread the line of being a woman in what is mostly a mans world. If she gets too forceful, shell end up on the street, while at the same time if she stays too meek and nice shes going to be relegated to the same human interest stories shes currently being assigned. A casual exchange between her and her co-anchor demonstrates this where he tosses a casual insult at her and she tosses it right back at him. It was all right for him to insult her and denigrate her as just a pretty face, but he takes umbrage at her shot back at him as being a threat to his credibility.
Michael Douglas does a fair job as Richard, but I got the feeling that he was pushing for a big story that will get him the limelight, no matter whether its something being blown out of proportion or not. Thats the whole point - what they witnessed is the system working and there was no story there. The depth is in what Godell knows about the x-rays being falsified. When Richard and Kimberly uncover that, they have their story, but both of them are so hungry to prove themselves they are willing to make mountains out of molehills.
Trivia : When Jack Godell is trying to lose his tail, he follows a fire engine. Its Engine 51 from the old Emergency! television series.
The truth is The China Syndrome wasnt a blanket indictment of the use of nuclear power. It was a blanket indictment of human failures as the reason we arent mature enough as a species to be using this power. We are too powered by our natural greed and selfishness to put safety first and foremost - no matter what the cost. We dont ask questions, naively believing that everyone will do everything on the up and up and not take shortcuts which will save them money when public safety is involved.
This issue of human fallibility and cover-ups is also addressed in Silkwood - check it out!
A modern nightmare nearly becomes reality in this timely tension-filled story about an "incident" at a nuclear power plant. Jane Fonda stars as Kimber...More at Family Video
A modern nightmare nearly becomes reality in this tension-filled story about an incident at a nuclear power plant. Jane Fonda stars as Kimberly Wells,...More at Buy.com Marketplaces
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