Panic In The  Street
2019

Shotgun Cinema New Orleans, LA

with

Lina Moses

Clinical Assistant Professor, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at Tulane University

Panic in the Streets— Going viral in New Orleans

New Orleans-based epidemiologist Lina Moses discusses disease epidemics in the sub-tropical port city, then (1950) and now. A 2019 National Week of Science on Screen bonus event!

Shotgun Cinema New Orleans, LA

Film Synopsis

A doctor and a policeman in New Orleans have only 48 hours to locate a killer infected with pneumonic plague.

When Dr. Clint Reed (Richard Widmark) is called in to supervise an autopsy of an unknown man, he discovers that the John Doe died of pneumonic plague. Revealing his discovery to the mayor and city officials, Reed is informed that he has 48 hours before the public will be told about a potential outbreak. Joined by Captain Tom Warren (Paul Douglas) and his wife, Nancy (Barbara Bel Geddes), Reed must race against time to find out where the unknown man came from. Elia Kazan’s 1950 noir film won an Academy Award for Best Writing, and launched the genre of outbreak movies.

About the Speaker

Dr. Lina Moses, assistant professor in the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at Tulane University, is an epidemiologist and disease ecologist. Her primary interest is the control of viral zoonoses transmitted from small mammals. Moses uses methods from epidemiology and ecology to understand the interface of human, animal, and pathogen. In addition to observational and quasi-experimental field studies, she is interested implementing human and animal surveillance for zoonoses at the community level. The ultimate goal of her research is to develop interventions to respond quickly to and reduce primary animal-to-human transmission of pathogens.