Black, White and the End of the World Movie
The world is just fine, as a planet. The people who were on the planet are gone. All gone, or are they...?
One reason this movie may never have become one of the well known classics is because some of us (like myself) don't think being alone in the world would be such a terrible thing. Could you handle being the last person on the planet, alone in every way, all day and night?
Harry Belafonte stars in this movie as a miner who is trapped deep in the mine. The world outside undergoes a war and when he finally manages to rescue himself from the mine he discovers everyone he has ever known is now gone. The reason he was never rescued from the mine was the absence of man power.
What would it be like to really be the last people on Earth?
My favourite part of the movie is watching Ralph (Harry Belafonte) make his own world in the dead world he finds himself so alone in. Ralph doesn't like being alone. He makes a place for himself where he brings in store mannequins to seem like company. He talks to them and interacts with them. But, one day, one of the plastic smiles of a mannequin gets on his nerves so he throws him off the balcony.
Down below a woman screams. This is where the story takes on another aspect, the issue of the last man and the last woman standing and, more importantly, the issue of black and white - race.
This movie comes out in the early 1960's. Racism was a big issue, or not, depending on how you look at it. When being racist is socially acceptable and expected is racism an issue at all? When the last two people on the planet are a black man and a white woman is race something of an issue? It is for Ralph, the lead character. He does not feel he can be anything beyond friends with this young, white woman. Yet she thinks there is nothing stopping them, until she finds herself talking about being young, female and white. The movie does make a great statement about race and how the issue is felt beyond the obvious.
Of course, everything is all upset again when a third person comes into their small society, a white man.
The movie ends in a unique way, a solution which seems too modern and is not likely to work out in the reality. It does give the movie a tidier and happier ending. Although... I have always wondered how things will work out as more people are found or manage to find this small group and begin to meld in. Is it possible some of this original group will wander off to be alone again?