The Last Child (film)

The Last Child is a 1971 American TV film.

It was the last film of Van Heflin.[1]

Plot

In the future, overpopulation has meant that people are allowed to only have one child and are denied all medical care (save for palliative care) when they turn 65.

Reception

Reviewing the film in the present day for the SF Weekly, David-Elijah Nahmod wrote:

When The Last Child was first broadcast on ABC in October 1971, star Michael Cole was enjoying a brief brush with stardom on the hit cop show The Mod Squad. The actor proved his acting chops with this intense drama set in the “not too distant future”.

Many issues come up during the film’s 71 minute running time — The Last Child remains potent and topical even today.

The film's primary question is a woman's right to autonomy over her body. Women today are once again being forced to fight for the right to decide for themselves whether or not to practice birth control or whether or not to have an abortion. The Last Child underscores many of those battles by reversing the question: what if a woman was forced to have an abortion against her will? At what point does a woman get to choose for herself without interference from others? At what point is the government overstepping its boundaries and interfering in a person's personal life?

Cole and Janet Margolin star as Alan and Karen, a couple still mourning the loss of their baby the year before. Karen is pregnant again, but in the grossly overpopulated futuristic society they live in, only one child per couple is allowed.

The fact that Karen’s baby died is of little consequence to the population control police, headed by a sociopathic Ed Asner. Asner was, at the time, achieving TV immortality for his delightful portrayal of the grumpy-if-kindhearted Mr. Grant on The Mary Tyler Moore Show. He offers a deliciously over-the-top, against-type performance as The Last Child’s villain.[2]

Cast

gollark: This is resolved now, abby said they were in my ender chest and they somehow were.
gollark: Also, I may be missing enchanted books from my chests but I am very uncertain.
gollark: <@&198138742333112320>
gollark: Also a neural connector and various random whatever.
gollark: I used to have tools of some sort.

References

  1. Vision of Life in Year 1992 Smith, Cecil. Los Angeles Times 05 Oct 1971: e16.
  2. Nahmod, David-Elijah. "The Golden Age of TV Movies: The Last Child (1971)". SFWeekly.com. SF Weekly. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
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