Silkwood
audience Reviews
, 79% Audience Score- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsA Blue Collar Drama Classic. Everything is really well done here, but the acting is outstanding and the highlightt. Streep gives an Oscar worthy performance for such a likeable, attractive, flawed, determined, and couragous person. The film nails the asetics, world building, and demeanor of blue collar working class with all star treatment. Ward, Cher, Nelson, all are excellent and Russell is really good to and has great chemistry with Streep. The settings are all memorable too thanks to the strong direction. This film also just makes you angry as well for the misgivings and struggles of blue vs white collar. The one thing that holds this back for me is the drama of Karen's life and the union/espionage story of her vs the company can feel like two seperate movies at times. There both great but the story of her versus the company is the more interesting of the two. One generate riveting drama while the other generates paranoia/tension. However, it felt like the paranoia factor could never get going consistently because the drama kind of slows things down and it has to ramp things up again. I'm not sure how you'd fix that but it still works really well overall. Anyone who is a fan of the director, any actors in this, dramas, or even thrillers may like this.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsThis movie is a wonderful but sometimes hard to watch. Cher and Streep are amazing. The reason it's hard to watch is because it's true. KAREN SILKWOOD is a hero of mine. GOD BLESS HER. I am thankful as a kid I watched this and wish I could stream it to others. More people need to see this piece of cinematic gold.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsWas a little too long with scenes that didn't seem necessary, but overall a good true story. Made me want to investigate Karen Silkwood's story more. Sad.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsOne of the best biopic that handles the true story of the life and death of a whistle blower that threatened to reveal how a nuclear company was risking lives over making profit.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 starsSlow, very slow. Boring.
- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsWorkers contend with the risk of plutonium contamination at their place of work.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsIt is dangerous to tell the truth or to complain, it could be at the cost your live. This story is not only based on the truth, it is the truth today.
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsA shocking true story with excellent performances all around.
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsNothing out of the ordinary but, surely, the protagonists' acting elevates the film.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsAnytime someone asks me which movie is the scariest I can think of, I name Silkwood. It's based on a true story. Whether or not the movie version is 100% factually based is beside the point. You cannot sit through this movie and not feel a chill. The music score plays a big part in this. Karen Silkwood was a real person, living through the HORROR of a job at a nuclear plant, where the management cared much more about profits than it did about the precious lives of its employees. The movie depicts the HORROR of being a poor person -- someone with no clout in the world, someone living in a dilapidated shack at the end of a dirt road, trying to scratch out some pleasure in an existence defined by stress. Karen finally finds an area of focus - the injustices at her job. But the poverty mindset is so ingrained in her boyfriend and her roommate -- Don't make waves! Keep your head down! Stay off The Man's radar! -- that Karen finds herself having to get along without the ONLY support systems she's known. But she keeps on. She won't keep her head down, and she'll continue to demand answers. Meryl Streep does an amazing job, transforming herself into this self-doubting yet daring, flawed character, who we realize COULD HAVE gone to the next level if ... something ... hadn't stopped her in her tracks. It is impossible not to feel paranoid after seeing this film, which implies that the powers that be at the nuclear plant, and perhaps higher up than that, have conspired to shut her down. What else could account for the impossibly high levels of radiation found not only on Karen herself, but in her tiny house? When the radiation levels sound the alarm, the very few, small things Karen has to her name, her house and her body, are ripped apart in the name of "safety." Anyone who has ever felt vulnerable and misunderstood will understand what Karen's life story has to tell us.