Here's what we can learn about the panic coronavirus of "contagion"
The coronavirus gave the 2011 thriller a brand new audience.
The filmContagion was released almost nine years ago. At the time, theSteven Soderbergh-The thriller directed on a mysterious disease that quickly became mortalglobal pandemic Received generally positive reviews but little fanfare. These days, however,Contagionfound a new audience as a result ofCoronavirus-related fears, like the movieseems to have strangely predicted the epidemic. He is currently at No 12 in the midst of the best rentals on theITunes cinema tableand Google Trends shows thatSearch "contagion" have been spiding since the end of February, when new cases of COVID-19 startedappear around the globe.
Scott burns, who wroteContagion, recently saidHollywood journalist that he was not "that surprised" the way "incredible" part of thesimilarities betweenContagion and the current coronavirus epidemic Are, because he talked to scientists while doing research for the film, they all said "that it's not a question of whether, but a question of when".
"What I learned from these scientists is that these things will happen," he said.
Contagion begins with a woman named Beth (Gwyneth Paltrow) Go home at Minnesota a business trip to Hong Kong. After feeling bad for a few days, she attributes to jet lag - she suddenly seized and collapsed. Her husband (Matt Damon) The precipitate into the hospital, where it dies unexpectedly of an unknown cause. Before you know, the rest of humanity follows, and the officials are struggling to contain the pandemic.
The recommendation of the CDC toAvoid touching your face seemed to bear in mind a quote from the film ofKate WinsletDr. Erin Mears, an epidemic intelligence service agent who tries toIdentify the virus: "The average person touches his face of 2,000 to 3,000 times a day, three to five times every minute of wake up," she says. (Note: This may be an exaggeration; a 2014 study in theAmerican newspaper for infection control placed at more than 23 times per hour, but always!)
Quarantine, lack of confirmationPublic Agent Information, andIncreased violence and hate crimes described inContagionUnfortunately, are also very relevant for coronavirus, making the apocalyptic scenes of the film and mass deaths seem to be prefigurant for the weeks to come.
Paltrow itself referencedContagion Last week, post a selfie wearing a respiratory mask while traveling in Paris.
"I have already been in this movie," she wrote. "Stay safe. Do not shake the hand. Wash frequently."
https://www.instagram.com/p/b9bxgpqffpw/?utm_source=ig_embed
ContagionTagline, "Nothing spreads like fear," seems just about money. In a swiveling scene, a CDC manager says "to get sick, you must first get in touch with a sick person or something that touched," but "to be afraid, all you have to do is to come into contact with a rumor or television, or on the Internet, adding that these rumors are "much more dangerous than the disease".
Michael Shamberg, who produced the film, recently told Buzzfeed News thatContagion was "very deliberately designed to be a precautionary film". However, he also stated that he hoped the film inspired people to take preventive measures rather than panic.
"If it's scary, it means only to scare people to take precautions and it was only to scare the infrastructure to do the right thing," he said. He said. "We are not trying to scare the people they all die. We try to scare the people you can do something."
After all, he says,Contagion "Shows that finally, there will be a solution and humanity will recover."