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Andromeda, Trixie, Captain Tripps, Motaba, KV and Rage (Oh, my)
In the original version of The Andromeda Strain, most of the inhabitants of the small town of Piedmont, Utah, die in mid-stride after a military satellite crashes nearby. Figuring that some sort of super-virulent space virus must be responsible for the deaths, a team of government scientists tries their best to stop the spread of the virus, code-named “Andromeda.”
Much like The Andromeda Strain, the government officials of The Crazies, here the Army, are shown to be relying on technology in order to stop the spread of the virus. Unlike the Andromeda Strain, however, in The Crazies these devices don’t work all that well, and ultimately government bureaucracy gets into the way of containing the virus.
The first half of the television mini-series The Stand (1994) dealt with a strain of superflu called “Captain Tripps” wiping out much of humanity while Twelve Monkeys (1995) depicted a future where people are forced to live deep underground in order to escape a virulent virus that has driven humanity to the brink of extinction. Outbreak, also from 1995, had an Ebola like virus called “Motaba” being accidentally introduced to a small California town and the government coming in to contain the outbreak. Like The Blob remake, in Outbreak, a certain faction of government officials is only interested in containing the virus to use as a weapon and is willing to eliminate the town’s entire population to keep their virus secret.
Borrowing heavily from both the original I Am Legend novel and The Crazies, the film 28 Days Later (2002) showed an England overrun by people infected with the “Rage” virus bent on homicide while the sequel 28 Weeks Later (2007) had the U.S. military heading up the repopulation of the U.K. that’s willing to eliminate every civilian when this virus unexpectedly returns. Then again, viruses aren’t always depicted as being bad in the movies. Let’s not forget that the virus that causes the common cold was the ultimate destruction to the Martians in The War of the Worlds (1953/2005). I guess the Martians were already immune to “Andromeda,” “Trixie,” “Motaba,” “KV” or “Rage.” The Andromeda Strain remake premiers Memorial Day (5/26) on A&E, with a DVD release scheduled the next week on June 3. |
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