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Writer/Director Todd Haynes
119 mins.
California, 1987. Housewife Carol White (Julianne Moore) has been dulled into a life of reserved routine and muffled stupidity after years in suburbia. She can barely comprehend herself, let alone the outside world, and has no idea how to react when that world begins to attack her.
She develops "multiple chemical sensitivity", a possibly psychosomatic aversion to everyday chemicals and pollutants. She nearly suffocates while driving on the freeway, then collapses at a friend's birthday party. Her husband Greg (Xander Berkeley) is dumbfounded, and a doctor incorrectly diagnoses her as lactose intolerant. She does not get better. Desperate, she retreats to the Wrenwood Center, a new-age community run by the calm-yet-sinister guru Peter Dunning (Peter Friedman), with a cult-like hold over its "patients".
Whether viewed as a black comedy, or the quintessential horror film for the '90s, Safe is a unique and disturbing experience.
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After her first attack, Carol retreats to an underground parking garage, a place as lonely and antiseptic as the world above. By the 21st century, it seems, there will be no place to run.
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The film is relatively subtle about everyday chemicals, never presenting them as overpowering until Carol becomes ill. By watching carefully, we see the physical pressure the modern human body can be put under, especially for women.
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Carol spots a flyer: "Are you allergic to the 20th century?"
Infected might be a more accurate word. The modern age isn't just giving Carol the sniffles and a headache, but a full-on human collapse.
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Carol is informed of her condition. What better way to learn about the evils of 20th century technology than through its most diabolical creation - the television? Again, nowhere to retreat.
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As she pulls into the Wrenwood center via taxi cab, Carol gets a glimpse of what she will become via a senior patient - that is, a raving, paranoid mess. But she is still too stunted to realize it. We never learn the ultimate consequence of her ignoring the call to stay away, but we can imagine it.
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As with any good cult, it hardly matters what leader Peter Dunning is saying, as long as it contains buzz words, positive energy, and phony empathy. He doesn't seem so sick himself, so where are his motivations?
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Whether sanctuary or techno-coffin, Carol's personal "igloo" turns out to be the most evocative location in the movie. In the scene above, she leaves behind exactly what she needs to get better - a warm, altruistic friend - in favor of retreat. The world can't touch her here, but neither can she touch it back.
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Above and below: "I love you", Carol repeats to herself. Of course, she can hardly be blamed for trying to save her own body, but it might be too late to cure what is contained inside it.