Tag Archive: Steven Soderbergh


CONTAGION directed by Steven Soderbergh (USA, 2011)

 We all know that coughs and sneezes spread diseases but this movie is founded on the plausible premise that what we touch is an even deadlier way to pass on infections.

The threat of a pandemic makes a topical doomsday scenario tied neatly with the recognition that the more technology evolves, the more tactile we have to be in our daily lives .

Short of handling pods, pads and other devices with disposable plastic gloves it’s hard to see how contagious illnesses can be contained if and when a major virus takes hold.

Epidemic Intelligence Service officer Dr. Erin Mears (Kate Winslet) throws in another curveball when she says that, “the average person touches their face two or three thousand times a day; three to five times every waking minute”. As one local bureaucrat dryly observes, this means that anyone with hands, a mouth and a nose is susceptible.

The first victim we see is Beth Emhoff which comes as a shock given that she is played by Gwyneth Paltrow (a few flashback scenes ensure she has something else to do other than die).

A post-mortem reveals cause for major concern, “Should I call someone?” asks one of medics, “Call everyone” replies his boss. Continue reading

SEX, LIES AND BERLUSCONI

- Liars are the second-lowest form of human being on the planet.
- What's the first?
- Lawyers.
From Steven Soderbergh's 'Sex, Lies and Videotape' (1989)

Being a compulsive liar  is what makes Berlusconi such a political survivor.

He continues to deny ALL the charges against him in the Rubygate scandal no matter how compelling the evidence.

The presence of under age prostitutes at Berlusconi’s  ‘bunga bunga’ parties is beyond dispute and  it beggars belief that he gave money to these women as gifts without getting sexual favours in return.

Yet he continues to deny ALL the accusations and even refuses to admit that he has ever paid for sex.

To protect himself  from what he maintains is a biased legal system, he is seeking to change the law so that those in public office can never be prosecuted .

Far be it from me to run to the defence of lawyers and judges,  but it now seems that  the slender hope that this latest scandal will finally bring down Berlusconi rests on proof that the cynical view expressed in Soderbergh’s movie is not universally true and that the sign in all the Italian courts means what it says :La legge è uguale per tutti (‘The Law is the same for everyone’).