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Silkwood

 
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Silkwood

  • Director: Mike Nichols
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Social Problem Film, Biopic
  • Themes: Whistleblowers, Fighting the System, Labor Unions
  • Main Cast: Meryl Streep, Kurt Russell, Cher, Craig T. Nelson, Diana Scarwid
  • Release Year: 1983
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 131 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Based on a true story, Silkwood begins and ends with Karen Silkwood (Meryl Streep) driving along a lonely road in 1974, heading to a meeting with a New York Times reporter to deliver evidence of negligence at the Kerr-McGee Plant in Cimarron, Oklahoma. The balance of the film flashes back to Karen's ribald private life with her lover (Kurt Russell) and her loose-living friends (Cher and Diana Scarwid). This is in contrast to her humdrum job at Kerr-McGee--or it least it was humdrum until Karen and several other employees become contaminated by radiation. The higher-ups want to sweep this incident under the rug, but Karen thinks that something's fishy, and informs the union of that fact. X-rays of the faulty fuel rods and written proof of the inadequate safety measures that caused Karen's illness are tampered with, forcing Karen to conduct her own private investigation. As she gathers evidence, Karen becomes a pariah to her boyfriend because of her obsession. She finally organizes the evidence into a briefcase, and heads off to her meeting with the Times reporter. She never makes it; the "official" report on her fatal auto accident is that Ms. Silkwood had been drinking and was under the influence of tranquilizers. Kerr-McGee was eventually forced to pay the Silkwood family an enormous settlement because of her contamination, but the full facts behind her convenient accident have never been revealed (though the filmmakers clearly indictate whom they hold responsible). Director Mike Nichols and screenwriters Nora Ephron and Alice Arlen surround this true story with a lively, improvisational atmosphere that gets the best out of Streep, Russell, and Cher, while providing perhaps the fullest on-screen realization of Nichols' theater-based techniques of realistic, character-centered, dialogue-driven filmmaking, as well as one of the first movie screenplays from future director Ephron. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Mike Nichols returned to directing films in 1983 after an eight-year hiatus with this absorbing if diffuse examination of the life of anti-nuke whistleblower Karen Silkwood. Somewhat of a departure from the typical conspiracy thriller treatment of this kind of material, the script develops the story deliberately, making Silkwood's heroism all the more credible. The film explores the dynamics of the relationship of the woman with her housemates, lover Kurt Russell and gay friend Cher, at considerable length. In fact, these characters are so given so much screen time that they sometimes distract from the main events of the story, the radiation contamination of Silkwood and other workers at the Kerr-McGee nuclear plant in Oklahoma. But it's difficult to imagine how it could have been otherwise in a story in which the lead character is basically an unwitting victim of negligence until well into the film. Nichols allowed the acting talents of Russell and Cher, who was nominated for an Academy Award, to flourish here, and Streep, also nominated, added yet another to her gallery of memorable performances. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide

Cast

Fred Ward - Morgan; Ron Silver - Paul Stone; Charles Hallahan - Earl Lapin; Josef Sommer - Max Richter; Sudie Bond - Thelma Rice; E. Katherine Kerr - Gilda Schultz; Bruce McGill - Mace Hurley; David Strathairn - Wesley; J.C. Quinn - Curtis Schultz; Kent Broadhurst - Carl; Richard Hamilton - Georgie; Les Lannom - Jimmy; James Rebhorn - Los Alamos Doctor; Ray Baker - Pete Dawson; Jim Beaver - Plant Manager; Michael Bond - 2nd Los Alamos Doctor; Bill Cobbs - Man in Lunchroom; Norm Colvin - Zachary; Henderson Forsythe - Quincy Bissell; Gary Grubbs - Randy Fox; Betty Harper - May Bissell; Tess Harper - Linda Dawson; Anthony Heald - 2nd Union Meeting Doctor; Graham Jarvis - Union Meeting Doctor; Betty King - Nurse; John Martin - Man with Flashlight; Will Patton - Joe; Vern Porter - Bill Charlton; M. Emmet Walsh - Walt Yarborough; Tom Stovall - Los Alamos Doctor; Christopher Saylors - Buddy

Credit

Richard James - Art Director, Joel Tuber - Associate Producer, Tom Stovall - Associate Producer, Mary Goldberg - Casting, Ann Roth - Costume Designer, Mike Nichols - Director, Sam O'Steen - Editor, Buzz Hirsch - Executive Producer, Larry Cano - Executive Producer, Georges Delerue - Composer (Music Score), Bob Mills - Makeup, Tom Priestley Jr. - Camera Operator, Patrizia Von Brandenstein - Production Designer, Miroslav Ondrícek - Cinematographer, Richard Brick - Production Manager, Michael Hausman - Producer, Mike Nichols - Producer, Derek R. Hill - Set Designer, Dennis Peeples - Set Designer, Larry Jost - Sound/Sound Designer, Alice Arlen - Screenwriter, Nora Ephron - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

The China Syndrome; Ground Zero; Marie; Norma Rae; The Plutonium Incident; Special Bulletin; Stronger Than the Sun; Je T'ai Dans la Peau; Daens; A Civil Action; Erin Brockovich; Harlan County War; Taking Back Our Town; North Country; Catch a Fire
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Silkwood

Original poster
Directed by Mike Nichols
Produced by Michael Hausman
Mike Nichols
Written by Nora Ephron
Alice Arlen
Starring Meryl Streep
Kurt Russell
Cher
Music by Georges Delerue
Cinematography Miroslav Ondricek
Editing by Sam O'Steen
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 14, 1983
Running time 131 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $35,615,609 (US)[1]

Silkwood is a 1983 American drama film directed by Mike Nichols. The screenplay by Nora Ephron and Alice Arlen was inspired by the true-life story of Karen Silkwood, who died in a suspicious car accident while investigating alleged wrongdoing at the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant where she worked.

Contents

Plot

Karen Silkwood, a hard-living metallurgy worker at the Kerr-McGee plant in Cimarron, Oklahoma, shares a ramshackle house with two co-workers, her boyfriend Drew Stephens and her lesbian friend Dolly Pelliker. In addition to working tedious hours making plutonium fuel rods for nuclear reactors and dealing with the constant threat of exposure to radiation, her time is consumed by an ongoing battle waged against her former common law husband in an effort to have more time with their three children. In the little leisure time she has, she enjoys drinking and indulging in recreational drug use.

Because the plant has fallen behind on a major contract, employees are required to work long hours of overtime and managers are falsifying safety reports and cutting corners wherever possible, risking the welfare of the personnel. Karen approaches the union with her concerns and becomes active in lobbying for safeguards. She travels to Washington, D.C. where she interacts with union officials who appear to be more interested in the publicity she is generating than her welfare and that of her co-workers.

When Karen and several others become contaminated by radiation, plant officials try to minimize the incident. When she discovers the negatives of photographs of the faulty fuel rods that caused her illness have been retouched and records of inadequate safety measures have been altered, Karen decides to conduct an investigation of her own. Complications arise in her personal life when Drew, unable to deal with her obsession with gathering evidence, moves out and funeral parlor beautician Angela joins the household as Dolly's lover.

Once she feels she has gathered all the proof of wrongdoing she needs, Karen contacts a reporter from the New York Times and arranges a meeting. In the film's final moments, the scene fades out as Karen sees headlights in her rear-view mirror, then fades in on the aftermath of her fatal one-car crash, and the viewer is left to decide what happened.

Production

The film was shot on location in Albuquerque and Los Alamos in New Mexico and Dallas, Howe, Texas City, and Tom Bean in Texas.

Cast

Critical reception

Vincent Canby of the New York Times called the film "a precisely visualized, highly emotional melodrama that's going to raise a lot of hackles" and "a very moving work." He added, "There are, however, problems, not unlike those faced by Costa-Gavras in his State of Siege and Missing, and they are major. Mr. Nichols and his writers . . . have attempted to impose a shape on a real-life story that, even as they present it, has no easily verifiable shape. We are drawn into the story of Karen Silkwood by the absolute accuracy and unexpected sweetness of its Middle American details and then, near the end, abandoned by a film whose images say one thing and whose final credit card another. The muddle of fact, fiction and speculation almost, though not quite, denies the artistry of all that's gone before." He concluded, "I realize that films shouldn't be judged in bits and pieces, but it's difficult not to see Silkwood in that way. For most of its running time it is so convincing - and so sure of itself - that it seems a particular waste when it goes dangerously wrong. It's like watching a skydiver execute all sorts of graceful, breathtaking turns, as he appears to ignore gravity and fly on his own, only to have him smash to earth when the chute doesn't open."[2]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film four stars and commented, "It's a little amazing that established movie stars like Streep, Russell and Cher could disappear so completely into the everyday lives of these characters."[3]

David Sterritt of the Christian Science Monitor called the film "a fine example of Hollywood's love-hate attitude toward timely and controversial subject matter." He continued, "The movie sides with Silkwood as a character, playing up her spunk and courage while casting wry, sidelong glances at her failings. When it comes to the issues connected with her, though, the filmmakers slip and slide around, providing an escape hatch . . . for every position and opinion they offer. This makes the movie less polemical than it might have been, and a lot more wishy-washy . . . This is too bad, because on other levels Silkwood is a strong and imaginative film. Meryl Streep gives the year's most astounding performance by an actress, adding vigor and complexity to almost every scene with her endlessly inventive portrayal of the eccentric heroine. The supporting players skillfully follow her lead."[4]

Box office

The film opened in 257 theaters in the United States on December 14, 1983 and grossed $1,218,322 on its opening weekend, ranking #12 at the box office. By its seventh week of release it had expanded to 816 screens and reached #1. It eventually earned $35,615,609 in the US.[1]

Awards and nominations

DVD releases

Anchor Bay Entertainment released the film on DVD in Region 1 on June 15, 1999. Viewers had the option of anamorphic widescreen or fullscreen formats.

A Region 2 DVD was released by PT Video on April 8, 2002.

A second Region 1 DVD was released by MGM Home Entertainment on October 7, 2003. It is in anamorphic widescreen format with subtitles in English, Spanish, and French.

References

External links


 
 

 

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