Coma Review

Coma
Dr Susan Wheeler is devastated when her best friend is pronounced brain dead after minor surgery at her hospital. Looking at the records, Susan finds that over the previous year a number of other fit young people have ended up the same way. She comes across two similarities to the cases - they all took place in the same operating theatre, and all the comatose bodies were moved to somewhere called the Jefferson Institute. She continues to investigate increasingly alone, starting to wonder if she

by William Thomas |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Jan 1978

Running Time:

113 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

Coma

Hospital life, death and hanky panky, are injected with a massive dose of suspense when doctor Genevieve Bujold unviels a murder-for-body-parts conspiracy.

Michael Douglas is Bujold's doctor boyfriend, who she suspects may be in on the plot and Tom Selleck stars as a bit-part beefcake patient with desirable organs.

A chiller with an edge, Coma capitalised superbly on the post-Watergate paranoia rampaging through the States, playing on the fear that your killer doesn't always come bearing an axes or chainsaws, but as a smiling doctor in a white coat.

Crichton's past in the medical profession help him to create a believable setting and cast of characters from a game adaptaiton of Robin Cook's successful novel, almost two decades before his ER hit the small screen.

And Bujold gives the finest performance of her career, closely resembling Sigourney Weaver's Ripley (Alien) as a woman forced to be strong beyond her wildest imagination, until a rather mundane plot twist does its best to send her from heroine to damsel in distress.

A suspense-filled nailbiter that plays on a fear no weapon weidling psycho can top.
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