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The Nishiyama family has been obsessed with the writings of Nostradamus
for generations, and while their interpretations of his writings were
pretty accurate, they were usually either ridiculed - or executed for
blasphemy. But now that the clock for mankind is ticking, Dr. Nishiyama
(Tetsuro Tanba), last male heir of his line and head of the science
council, sees it necessary to address the Japanese gouvernment to warn
them about total disaster. And this is the starting point for a tale about
the destruction of the enviroment, poisoning of our seas and our food,
giant snails, hostile plants, humans rotting alive, over-population,
suicide cults, mass starvation, stillbirths, mutations, revolutions, war,
and ultimately a fully automatized nuclear war that doesn't even need
humans to launch its missiles. And somehow, Dr. Nishiyama, his daughter
Mari (Kaoru Yumi) and her boyfriend and Nishiyama's confidant journalist
Akira (Toshio Kurosawa) seem to be on the forefront of it all. The film
closes with Nishiyama back addressing the gouvernment, as everything we
saw was just part of his elaboration, and with the Japanese Prime Minister
(So Yamamura) giving a heartfelt speech reminding us of our own
responsibility. Now one thing's for sure, the film's message as
such is nothing less than commendable, and even if it takes the prophecies
of Nostradamus as its vehicle, many of the "threats" the film
addresses were in fact very present in the 1970s, from growing
enviromental concerns to an out-of-bounds arms race to mass starvations in
Third World countries, and even the film's attempts to see the bigger
picture and come to the right conclusions ring true most of the time. On
the downside though, the film is very episodic, just seems to rush from
disaster to disaster, and at times the inclusion of Nichiyama and company
in all of them seems forced, and some of his warning monologues seem
stilted, so if you're looking for utter narrative coherence let alone a
comprehensible story arc, then this film under-delivers. But that said,
some isolated scenes are just chilling, from an expedition to New Guinea
where our heroes find the rotting yet still alive members from another
expedition, to some of the mass suicide scenes. And dedicated audiences
will no doubt love the many cool miniature effects and scenes of utter
destruction. So in all, not a great film, and sometimes just too
on-the-nose, but at least in parts very enjoyable nonetheless.
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