40 Beats (Coma) Coma
The film in 40 beats, structured by the Two Approaches framework. Dr. Susan Wheeler's initial approach is to work the institution from inside — gather evidence, present it up the chain, demand to be heard, trust the playbook surgical residents are trained in. Her post-midpoint approach is to trust no one inside the building, get the physical proof at the source, leave it with someone who can use it, and go around the institution to outside authority. Eleven structural rivets mark the turns. The quadrant is better tools, sufficient — the new approach is tested at maximum stakes in OR 8 and holds, with a wind-down that gives the bare minimum of restored order: two police officers at the door.
1. [0m] A radio in the dark recites Boston's morning corruption blotter.
The film opens before any image of Susan, on the radio in her apartment: Mayor White's assistant, contractor James McManus arrested on bribery charges in connection with the Mystic River extension.1 The civic frame is established before the hospital frame — Boston as a city where institutions absorb scandal as routine.2
2. [0m] Susan presents on rounds and scrubs in. (Equilibrium)
Hospital corridors at full bustle: residents reading off vitals on Mrs. Levine's post-cholecystectomy, an attending dropping the line "Harris can't nail us on this one."3 Overlapping chatter floods the soundtrack — stock tips, lipstick, an endocarditis case.4 A nurse turns to Susan: "We're ready when you are, Dr. Wheeler."5 Susan steps to the table — "Sponge. Begin to tie off."6 Competent third-year resident in her stable mode, inside the institution she trusts.7
3. [2m] Susan and Mark fight about politics, beer, and the shower.
Mark recounts his political maneuver with Rudnick about the chief-resident slot.8 Susan tells him to get his own beer; he calls her impossible.9 The argument escalates through chores and respect — "Don't call me honey," "Couldn't have fallen in love with a nurse," "You don't want a lover, you want a goddamn wife!"10 Susan walks out into the night.11
4. [7m] Susan, alone outside: "Bastard."
A single word in the dark closes the apartment scene.12
5. [7m] Surgical reconciliation; Susan refuses to give up her dance class.
Mark catches her in the hallway after a procedure. He's sorry about last night; can they have lunch? Susan has class. "That class is the only time I get out of this damn hospital."13 Mark calls her impossible again and walks off.14
6. [8m] Dance class — Nancy reveals her D&C is a TAB.
Susan and Nancy Greenly stretch through the count.15 Nancy is eight to ten weeks pregnant and her husband doesn't know — the procedure tomorrow is a therapeutic abortion booked as "menstrual irregularity."16 Susan reassures her: "It's routine procedure."17
7. [9m] The anesthesia lesson — Cowans walks the medical students through the kit.
Dr. Cowans demonstrates: nitrous oxide on the left, oxygen on the right, manometers and flow valves, emergency oxygen full and checked.18 He walks Nancy through the count — "start counting from 100 backwards real slow" — and she reaches ninety-six before she stops.19 Crichton hands the audience the equipment list before the conspiracy is named, so the recognition can land later.20
8. [12m] Nancy's D&C — "red as a cherry," then fixed and dilated pupils. (Inciting Incident, Part 1)
Dr. Richards opens; mid-procedure Nancy throws a PVC and her blood pressure falls.21 Richards looks down: "She's fully oxygenated. Red as a cherry down here."22 The team brings her back, finishes the procedure, then tries to wake her. "Mrs. Greenly? Wake up. Nance, can you give me a cough, please?"23 After a long silence: "Jesus Christ! Her pupils are fixed and dilated."24
9. [16m] Post-op rounds — "another anesthetic reaction."
Bellows works through Schwartz's cholecystectomy; on the next bed an attending dictates "delayed return of consciousness of cryptogenic origin," a senior physician rules out succinylcholine, and a staffer adds the small word: "Looks like another anesthetic reaction."25 The institution already knows it has happened before.26
10. [17m] Susan with Jimmy in pediatrics — the page to ICU. (Inciting Incident)
Susan is showing Jimmy the colored Band-Aids and explaining a kidney transplant when the PA pages her.27 In the surgical ICU corridor she asks "What's her status?" and the staff fires back: "Greenly? Complete squash rot. She's a total Gomer. It's brain death."28 The disruption is tailored — not a stranger, not a statistic, the one person Susan knew outside the hospital power structure.29
11. [19m] Nancy's chart — the tissue-typing slip with no name. (Resistance / Debate)
Susan reads the chart over Mark's shoulder: normal 28-year-old, telothane anesthesia, irreversible coma, transient PVCs, nothing else.30 She finds the anomaly — a tissue-typing test on a D&C patient, the slip itself with no name and no billing number.31 Mark deflects ("the lab ran a test on the wrong patient... let's go home, you're tired") and Susan refuses: "Stop acting as if there's something wrong with me. I'm checking the lab now."32 The lab is closed; she'll be there at six in the morning.33
12. [23m] The computer-room printout — 240 names. (Commitment)
Susan persuades the night lab tech to run an unauthorized query. He explains the system exists to bill patients, not to research them.34 She narrows: surgical patients with discharge diagnosis of coma in the past year. The printer runs. "I had no idea."35 Two hundred and forty names. Ten of them young people admitted for breast biopsy or appendectomy.36 The lab tech hits on her — "Are you married or what?" — as she walks out.37 The bounded scene where Susan crosses from asking the institution for an explanation to building her own case against it.38
13. [27m] Susan presents the printout to Mark, who pivots through three defenses.
Mark's first reaction is that data access is illegal; second is the statistical argument ("six per 100,000... in a hospital this size, ten patients in a year is not surprising"); third is to redirect her to her duties — "you missed your rounds. Why don't you do your job?"39 None of the three engages with the substance.40
14. [27m] Sean Murphy in for a meniscectomy — the second mark.
Susan takes Murphy's history at his bedside; he jokes about the suspense killing him, mentions he hurt the knee playing touch football.41 The PA cuts in: "Dr. Wheeler, see Dr. Harris. See Dr. Harris in his office."42 Bellows from somewhere nearby: "The chief of surgery himself."43
15. [28m] Harris's office — confiscation of the printout.
Harris takes a call from a senator's office in front of Susan, then explains that an unauthorized data entry was made on her behalf.44 He confiscates the printout — "we'll forget it ever happened" — and orders her to see the staff psychiatrist, Dr. Morelind, as a precondition of continuing at Memorial.45 Warmth, concern, evidence taken, mandatory psychiatric assessment imposed.46
16. [31m] The Morelind session — "she's under stress and a little paranoid."
Susan opens up: Mark, Nancy, the back-on-her-back feeling.47 Morelind asks "How do you feel?"; Susan says "confused."48 Then she pivots — ten cases of unexplained coma, isn't that surprising? Morelind: "You don't?"49 He hands her the same statistical argument Mark gave her: 30,000 operations a year, a few unexplained side effects, medicine isn't perfect.50 The scene cross-cuts to Morelind on the phone with Harris: "she's under stress and a little paranoid... I don't think we'll have any more trouble with her."51 The institution speaks with one voice.52
17. [33m] Murphy comes out the same way Nancy did — "twice in two days."
Susan and Mark watch Dr. George diagnose Murphy's brain death by the bedside — pupils fixed and dilated, "completely different... different staffs, different anesthetic agents," and again the cherry-red oxygenation an anesthesiologist describes without recognizing.53 The team starts planning the long-term management: tracheotomy, electrolyte balance, "we can keep him alive a year, two years, indefinitely."54 Susan: "Mark, twice in two days. It's not normal." Mark: "You're just sensitized to it."55
18. [36m] Dr. George's lab — "I'm afraid I do mind."
Susan calls the records office; the charts she wants are signed out to Dr. George, the chief of anesthesiology.56 She walks down to confront him directly. George: "We have a happy lab here. It's precise. There's nothing left to chance. There are no mistakes."57 Twelve cases now, not ten — different ages, sexes, surgeons, anesthetists, methods of induction.58 Susan asks to see the charts; George refuses: "Thank you for your interest, however misplaced."59
19. [38m] Mark lectures Susan on Dr. George's wife's $50–100 million.
Mark, frantic: George is past president of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, on the board of the NIH, married to Amy Cabot with money in the eight or nine figures.60 "He has a lot of muscle here. He's the wrong man to cross."61 Susan: "You afraid to be seen with me?"62
20. [39m] Bill Chandler offers Mark the chief-resident slot for managing Susan.
The current chief resident sits Mark down and runs the line transparently: "What happens to Susan may depend on you... a good chief resident handles problems like this every day... if you're able to exert some influence over her, people would be appreciative."63 Mark calls Susan paranoid to Chandler's face. "Good man."64
21. [41m] Pathology — Jim and Ed Harris work out the perfect murder.
Nancy has died in ICU and been sent for autopsy. Susan finds Jim mid-section: brain grossly normal, just like the other cases, comes up cold.65 Susan asks the question hypothetically: "If you wanted to put people in a coma, what would you do?"66 Jim and the resident run through tannadol (leaves a serum trace), paradine (has a taste), and arrive at carbon monoxide.67 Jim: "It's perfect. Anesthetist uses carbon monoxide instead of oxygen. It's colorless and makes the blood red so the surgeon doesn't notice."68 Susan files the model.69
22. [44m] Harris's second meeting — warmth, tears, the weekend off.
Harris has had "a rather hysterical call from Dr. George." He pivots from reprimand to comfort: "I can protect you... because you're a woman."70 He gets Susan to cry about Nancy; he holds off a call from the secretary of HEW to give her his full attention.71 "Take the weekend off. Go walk on the beach. Get away from the hospital."72
23. [48m] After Susan leaves: "Women! Christ!"
Two words behind the closed office door demolish the preceding twenty minutes. The avuncular performance was tactical.73
24. [48m] Susan's car won't start; Vince follows her into the MTA station.
A man tampers with her MGB; Susan flees into the subway, where he pursues her into the station.74 Mark dismisses the report: "Your car is always breaking down... I just think you're tired."75
25. [50m] Susan names the OR 8 connection; Mark says "Get your coat on."
In the apartment Susan lays it out: twelve coma cases, two charts she's seen, both procedures in OR 8, "what if carbon monoxide were being pumped into O.R. 8?"76 Mark, for the first time, engages without dismissal: "We're going to take a look. Right now."77 The night visit to OR 8 yields nothing visible — the mechanism is hidden in the ventilation.
26. [52m] The weekend at the beach — the only sustained calm.
Two short lines on a beach, then ninety seconds of silence. Susan and Mark on the Massachusetts coast; the only stretch of the film where neither the institution nor the conspiracy can reach her.78
27. [54m] First Jefferson Institute approach — Mrs. Emerson's negations.
Susan persuades Mark to detour past the Jefferson Institute on the way back. Mrs. Emerson meets her in the lobby: tour is Tuesday at eleven, no impromptu visits, no physician in charge, no supervisor, no staff.79 Each answer strips away a layer of institutional normalcy.80 Emerson notes Susan's name as she leaves.81
28. [58m] Kelly the maintenance worker — "I know how it works."
A maintenance worker stops Susan in the corridor: he heard what she said to Dr. George. He's seen how they do it. "I know how it works."82 Bellows walks up and Kelly breaks off, whispering a rendezvous: "Come down to maintenance tonight. I'll show it to you."83
29. [60m] Vince electrocutes Kelly in the basement. (Escalation 1)
Kelly meets Vince in the maintenance area; Vince stares him down, dumps water on him, and throws him against the power grid. Single line: "They said make it look like an accident."84 The lights go out. Susan arrives to find Kelly dead and the power crews working on restoration.85 The bounded scene that puts the most pressure on the institutional approach: Susan's only independent witness is eliminated and the conspiracy now knows she is investigating.
30. [62m] The duct crawl — Susan finds the gas line.
Two hundred and seventy-six seconds without dialogue. Susan enters the basement, finds the carbon monoxide tank, traces the gas line up through the ventilation system. Before climbing into the ductwork she removes her espadrilles and pantyhose — a practical act that drew applause at opening-weekend screenings.86 She follows the line to the ceiling above OR 8 and finds the radio-controlled valve where the carbon monoxide cuts in to the oxygen feed.87 At 01:06:51 a guard intercepts her on the way out; she bluffs through with charts and a Red Sox score.88
31. [67m] Vince poses as hospital security.
Vince, in the dark of an upper-floor corridor, addresses Susan as "doctor" and announces a routine security check.89 Susan recognizes him from the MTA station and ducks down a different hallway. She finds the real security guard, Jerry, and starts to report — then stops mid-sentence when the radio cuts to the Red Sox game.90 "I guess I have an overactive imagination."91
32. [69m] Library detour — Marcus on the phone, the calm before Jefferson.
Jerry walks Susan to the medical school library, reciting kidney biochemistry from memory.92 Dr. Marcus is on the phone debating morphine sulphate dosage, ending with the casually corrupt instruction "Give him five cc's of water. Say it's morphine."93 A structural pause before the major sequence.
33. [81m] Jefferson Institute tour — "patients are suspended by wires through long bones."
Susan returns Tuesday on the scheduled physician tour. Mrs. Emerson delivers the operation in bureaucratic register: temperature 94.7, humidity 82, low-level UV bacteriostatic flux, indwelling telemetry.94 The tour group dons protective glasses; the door opens onto the main care facility — a mauve-tinted hall of comatose bodies suspended on wires through their long bones, regulated by computer with no human attendant.95 Cost: $60 a day now, $5 a day at scale, "less than it costs to hire a baby-sitter."96
34. [85m] Susan slips off and finds the organ market.
Two technicians arguing about a sandwich order are simultaneously cataloguing the inventory and running an auction.97 Heart to San Francisco, $75,000, only a two-of-four tissue-type match because it's a rush order.98 Kidney to Texas, perfect four-tissue match, $200,000 — "a millionaire's son."99 Bidding on a left kidney to Zurich at forty-five thousand, routed New York-Rome, twenty-three hours elapsed time.100 "Good old George has the connections."101
35. [88m] Security pursuit — ledges, dogs, the suspended bodies as cover. (Escalation 2)
The technicians spot Susan on monitor four. "All units! There is an unauthorized woman in the building. Let's take her alive."102 Susan flees through corridors, climbs onto an exterior ledge, hides among the suspended comatose bodies in the main care facility.103 To one of them, in passing: "There, there. It's going to be all right."104 Mrs. Emerson on the radio in the lobby, perfectly composed: "If she comes here, we'll get her. There's no way she can escape."105
36. [93m] Susan rides out on the roof of an organ-transport ambulance.
The ambulance driver loads up for the Dallas flight, complaining about rush-hour traffic and the tunnel.106 As the ambulance pulls away from the loading dock, Susan climbs onto the roof and rides out exposed.107 The post-midpoint approach in motion: get the proof out of the building.
37. [76m] Susan at the apartment — "Mark, it's all happening."
Susan reaches Mark in a panic and pours out everything: Kelly dead, gas line in the basement up to the OR 8 ceiling, radio valve, twelve cases, the bodies at Jefferson.108 Mark says "I believe you" and "okay, that-a-girl, just relax" in the same breath, then pours her tea and a Valium.109
38. [78m] Mark calls Harris from the kitchen — the institutional approach collapses. (Midpoint)
Harris on the phone, audible to the audience but not to Susan: "That's a hell of a story, Susan. You really had a lot of people worried. Don't worry. Everything's going to be okay now."110 Mark, after listening: "She came back. No, she's here now. Of course. No, I can manage that. I'll keep her here."111 He hangs up and walks back through the doorway: "You want some honey with your tea?"112 The bounded scene where the partner who said "I believe you" three minutes earlier has called the chief of surgery to report Susan's location.113
39. [80m] Phone booth — Susan hangs up rather than say where she is.
Susan slips out of the apartment and finds a payphone. She reaches the residents' exchange, asks for messages — and when the operator asks "What number can you be reached at?" she hangs up.114 The new approach is named without speech: trust no one inside the building.
40. [95m] Harris pours scotch and gives the cathedrals speech.
Susan, exhausted, has come back to confront Harris in his office. He greets her with a drink — "I like a woman who drinks Scotch."115 He takes a call from Tom Landis in Washington about congressional testimony, returns to the desk: "It seems you know everything."116 Susan, slowly: "You're George."117 Harris's monologue: "Society isn't deciding. Congress isn't deciding... Because society is leaving it up to us, the experts. The doctors."118 Then: "These great hospital complexes are the cathedrals of our age."119 And: "The individual is too small."120 The scotch is drugged.121
41. [100m] Harris schedules an emergency appendectomy in OR 8.
Susan slumps; Harris explains: the drug produces abdominal spasm and peritoneal symptoms.122 He picks up the phone: "This is Dr. Harris. Schedule an emergency appendectomy in O.R. 8. It's a member of the house staff, Dr. Wheeler. I've examined her. She requires immediate surgery."123 In pre-op Mark believes the diagnosis until the OR assignment changes — Harris insists on OR 8 when OR 7 is ready, refuses the substitution twice, and Mark's face shifts.124 Mark fakes a page about a surgical-two patient with convulsions and excuses himself.125
42. [104m] OR 8 / basement intercut — Mark smashes the gas line. (Climax)
In OR 8: Susan under, Pentothal in, Harris with the scalpel.126 In the basement: Mark following Susan's voiceover-replayed route — "I found the oxygen line. It starts in the basement and it goes up the main tunnel and then it plugs in the ceiling that goes to O.R. 8."127 Back to OR: PVCs, blood pressure dropping, the anesthesiologist saying "I don't understand."128 Cut to basement: Mark finds the apparatus and smashes it. "Son of a bitch! Son of a bitch!"129 Cut to OR: "She's okay, sir. She's just fine, Dr. Harris."130 Nurse, oblivious: "Nice case, Dr. Harris."131 The bounded intercut sequence where the post-institutional approach is tested at maximum stakes and holds — the partner who used to dismiss her runs her playbook from her own words.132
43. [109m] Recovery; police at the OR door. (Wind-Down)
Susan groggy on the gurney, still fighting: "Don't let him do the operation."133 Mark, holding her hand: "I know, baby. I know."134 In the corridor outside OR 8 a police officer addresses Harris quietly: "We're waiting for you, Dr. Harris."135 The film's last line.136 No courtroom, no press conference, no celebration — the new equilibrium is the smallest possible image of restored authority, the state finally arriving at the door the institution kept closed.137
Through the Commitment: The first twelve beats install Susan as a competent third-year resident inside an institution she trusts and a relationship she resents but maintains. The hospital is naturalistic and busy; the apartment fight is about chores and respect; the dance class with Nancy is the only stretch of female intimacy outside the power structure. Nancy's brain death is the disruption tailored to Susan — not a stranger, not a statistic, the one person who knew her outside Boston Memorial. The chart-and-tissue-typing scene closes the brief debate; the computer-room scene installs the Commitment with one dry line — "I had no idea" — as the printout runs and Susan walks out with two hundred and forty names.
Through the Midpoint: Rising action runs the institutional approach at maximum throttle — present the printout, watch Murphy fall the same way, sit in Harris's office and Morelind's office, defy Dr. George at the lab, sit through the pathology scene where Jim and the resident name carbon monoxide as the perfect weapon. The escalation is Kelly's murder: the only independent witness eliminated, the conspiracy now aware Susan is investigating. The duct crawl proves the mechanism; the Jefferson visits prove the operation. The midpoint is one bounded scene: Mark's phone call to Harris from the kitchen, the institutional partner pivoting from "I believe you" to "I'll keep her here" to "You want some honey with your tea?" The institutional approach collapses completely.
Through the Climax: The phone-booth hang-up names the new approach without speech — trust no one inside the building. Susan returns to Jefferson alone, witnesses the organ market with her own eyes, hides among the suspended bodies and rides out on the roof of the ambulance. The escalation has changed the field of play from explanation to survival. The confrontation with Harris is staged in his own office over scotch he has drugged — "you're George," the cathedrals speech, "the individual is too small." The climax is the smallest possible intercut sequence: Harris with the scalpel over Susan's body in OR 8, Mark in the basement following Susan's own voiceover as a map, the gas line smashed, "she's okay, sir." The partner who used to dismiss her finally exits the institutional script and uses her words as procedure.
Wind-Down and new equilibrium: Recovery — Susan groggy, still trying to warn Mark of an operation that has already failed; Mark holding her hand. In the corridor outside OR 8, two anonymous police officers wait. "We're waiting for you, Dr. Harris" is the film's last line. The wind-down for the better/sufficient quadrant in this film is not a celebration but the bare minimum of restored order: the institution's most senior conspirator is led away by the state the institution's hierarchy was meant to keep at the door. Susan is alive, Mark has acted, the operation is exposed — and the camera holds the last image only long enough to register that the cathedrals can be entered after all.
The Two Approaches Arc
The shape of Coma is procedural rather than psychological. Susan does not change as a person between Beat 1 and Beat 43 — she is competent, direct, and unwilling to be patronized in the opening rounds and she is competent, direct, and unwilling to be patronized strapped to the table in OR 8. What changes is what she is willing to do with the institution: at the start she is inside it, at the midpoint she is being managed by it, at the climax she has gone around it. The arc is a method change and the framework is built to describe exactly this — an approach is not only goals and understandings but tools and techniques, and Susan's tool change is total.
Every dismissal in the first hour does the same procedural work: convert a substantive question ("twelve coma cases in OR 8, all young, all healthy, all tissue-typed") into an emotional state that requires management ("you're upset," "you're tired," "you're paranoid," "take the weekend off"). The pattern is so consistent across Mark, Morelind, Chandler, Dr. George, and Harris that it reads as institutional behavior rather than personal failing. The conspiracy needs the gendered dismissal because the dismissal is the containment mechanism; without it, Susan's evidence would be heard. The film's most-cited feminist gesture — the pantyhose removal in the duct crawl — lands because it is procedurally legible: she stops dressing for the institution and dresses for the work. The new approach takes physical form at the moment the old one is stripped off.
Harris's villain monologue is the film's intellectual center but not its climax. Crichton stages the cathedrals speech in Harris's office over a glass of scotch — Susan hears the philosophy and sees through it in one beat, "you're George," and then the drug takes her. The film does not give her the satisfaction of arguing back; her response is "you're crazy" and "you're killing people," delivered through the haze. The climax is not the argument because the film knows the argument cannot be won inside the cathedral. The climax is in OR 8 and in the basement, where Mark — not Susan — finally runs Susan's playbook by following her own voiceover as a map. Better tools, sufficient: not because the institution was reformed but because someone outside it was reached in time.
The wind-down withholds celebration deliberately. There is no courtroom scene, no press conference, no scene of Susan being vindicated to the colleagues who dismissed her. The film ends on a single line by an anonymous police officer — "We're waiting for you, Dr. Harris" — because the new equilibrium for this quadrant in this film is the bare minimum of restored order. The institution's most senior conspirator is led away by the state, and that is the entire payoff. The framework places the film by the protagonist arc and calls it better/sufficient. The director's final shot insists the win is small.
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Radio: "Saugus: Police have arrested contractor James McManus on $23 million grant and bribery charges." (5–6, [0m]) ↩
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The opening embeds the hospital in a real civic world before turning it sinister. (wikipedia) ↩
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Attending: "Well, Harris can't nail us on this one." (13, [1m]) ↩
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Overlapping corridor chatter — stock prices, lipstick, an endocarditis case. (15–28, [1m]) ↩
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Nurse: "We're ready when you are, Dr. Wheeler." (29, [1m]) ↩
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Surgical staff: "Sponge. Begin to tie off." (32, [1m]) ↩
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Crichton's naturalistic OR — Susan as competent third-year resident in her stable mode. (le cinema dreams) ↩
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Bellows: "Then he says that Harris told him that Mark Bellows was going to be the next chief resident." (36–37, [2m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "Get your own beer." (55, [3m]) ↩
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Bellows: "You don't want a lover... you want a goddamn wife!" (116–117, [6m]) ↩
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Wikiquote attributes the closing lines to Wheeler and Bellows as transcribed. (wikiquote) ↩
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Wheeler: "Bastard." (118, [7m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "That class is the only time I get out of this damn hospital." (131, [7m]) ↩
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Bellows: "You're impossible!" (133, [8m]) ↩
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Instructor: "Seven, eight, step!" (134, [8m]) ↩
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Nancy: "He did the lab tests and he says I'm definitely 8 to 10 weeks pregnant. So Dr. Richards is doing a D and C tomorrow. For menstrual irregularity." (149–151, [8m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "It'll be fine, Nancy. It's routine procedure." (155, [9m]) ↩
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Cowans: "We got two main wall lines. Nitrous oxide on the left and oxygen." (162, [9m]) ↩
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Nancy reaches ninety-six on the countdown. (197–201, [11m]) ↩
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Crichton's medical-school background informs the set-piece. (michaelcrichton.com) ↩
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Cowans: "She just threw a PVC, and her blood pressure's falling." (244, [13m]) ↩
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Richards: "She's fully oxygenated. Red as a cherry down here." (246, [14m]) — the carbon-monoxide forensic signature, planted before the conspiracy is named. ↩
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Cowans: "Nance, can you give me a cough, please?" (266, [15m]) ↩
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Cowans: "Jesus Christ! Her pupils are fixed and dilated." (267, [15m]) ↩
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Staff: "Looks like another anesthetic reaction." (296, [17m]) ↩
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The institution already knows it has happened before. (wikipedia) ↩
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Wheeler explains the kidney transplant to Jimmy. (303–308, [17m]) ↩
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Staff: "Greenly? Complete squash rot. She's a total Gomer. It's brain death." (323–326, [18m]) ↩
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The dehumanizing slang contrasts with Susan's tenderness with Jimmy in the previous scene. (le cinema dreams) ↩
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Wheeler: "Normal 28-year-old patient in good health for a D and C, underwent telothane anesthesia, comes out in irreversible coma." (351–352, [21m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "Here it is. No name on the slip and no billing number." (367, [22m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "Stop acting as if there's something wrong with me or the way I'm thinking! I'm checking the lab now." (377–378, [23m]) ↩
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Bellows: "It closed at 6:00." (382, [23m]) ↩
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Lab tech: "We install these computers to bill patients." (417, [24m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "I had no idea." (430, [25m]) ↩
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Wheeler to Bellows next scene: "Two hundred and forty names. Ten are young people admitted for minor procedures." (443–444, [27m]) ↩
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Lab tech: "Are you married or what?" (432, [26m]) ↩
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The bounded scene where Susan crosses from asking the institution for an explanation to building her own case against it. (cinebeats) ↩
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Bellows: "The risk of surgical anesthesia is six per 100,000. In a hospital this size, 10 patients in a year is not surprising." (447–448, [27m]) ↩
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Bellows: "Why don't you do your job?" (452, [27m]) ↩
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Murphy: "Well, the suspense is really killing me." (457, [28m]) ↩
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PA: "Dr. Wheeler, see Dr. Harris in his office." (463–464, [28m]) ↩
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Bellows (?): "The chief of surgery himself." (465, [28m]) ↩
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Harris: "An unauthorized entry was made last night." (484, [29m]) ↩
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Harris: "It's a precondition to your continuing on here at Memorial." (508, [31m]) ↩
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Harris's containment script — warmth, concern, evidence taken, mandatory psych. (movie nation) ↩
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Wheeler: "Mark's whining about how I can't make a commitment." (511, [31m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "Confused... that's all." (522–523, [32m]) ↩
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Morelind: "You don't." (534, [32m]) ↩
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Morelind: "Medicine isn't perfect. We all accept that. Don't we?" (537–539, [32m]) ↩
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Morelind to Harris: "She's under stress and a little paranoid." (544, [33m]) ↩
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The institutional dismissal speaks with one voice — Mark, Morelind, Chandler, Dr. George, Harris all run the same line. (wikipedia) ↩
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Anesthesiologist on Murphy: "Skin color and blood were all red and fully oxygenated." (568, [34m]) ↩
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Staff: "We can keep him alive in stable vital signs, a year, two years, indefinitely." (586–588, [34m]) ↩
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Bellows: "You're just sensitized to it." (594, [35m]) ↩
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Records staff: "They're all signed out to Dr. George, the chief of anesthesiology." (612, [36m]) ↩
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Dr. George: "We have a happy lab here. It's precise. There's nothing left to chance. There are no mistakes." (615–617, [36m]) ↩
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Dr. George: "Different ages and sexes. Different surgeons and anesthetists. Different methods of induction." (637–638, [37m]) ↩
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Dr. George: "Thank you for your interest, however misplaced." (644, [38m]) ↩
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Bellows: "Dr. George's wife is worth somewhere between 50 and 100 million dollars." (657–658, [39m]) ↩
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Bellows: "He has a lot of muscle here. He's the wrong man to cross." (661, [39m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "You afraid to be seen with me?" (662, [39m]) ↩
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Chandler: "If you're able to exert some influence over her, people would be appreciative." (691–692, [40m]) ↩
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Chandler: "Good man." (694, [40m]) — the handshake between men who have agreed to manage a woman. ↩
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Jim: "Just like the other cases, we come up cold." (729, [43m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "If you wanted to put people in a coma, what would you do?" (731, [43m]) ↩
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Pathology resident: "Diethyl para-amino tannadol." (733, [43m]); Jim: "It also peaks alk phos. A real giveaway." (735–736, [43m]) ↩
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Jim: "It's colorless and makes the blood red so the surgeon doesn't notice." (750, [44m]) ↩
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Susan files the model — and matches it to the cherry-red oxygenation she heard described in OR. (wikiquote) ↩
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Harris: "I can protect you because you're good. And frankly, because you're a woman." (782–783, [45m]) ↩
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Secretary: "Dr. Harris, the secretary of HEW is on the phone from Washington." Harris: "Call back." (801–802, [47m]) ↩
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Harris: "Take the weekend off, Sue. Go walk on the beach. Get away from the hospital." (810–811, [47m]) ↩
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Harris: "Women! Christ!" (819–820, [48m]) — two words behind the closed office door demolish the preceding twenty minutes. ↩
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Wheeler later to Bellows: "A man fixed my car so it wouldn't start, then followed me into the MTA station." Bellows transcribes the report dismissively. (823–824, [50m]) ↩
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Bellows: "Your car is always breaking down. I just think you're tired." (826–827, [50m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "What if carbon monoxide were being pumped into O.R. 8?" (836, [50m]) ↩
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Bellows: "Get your coat on. We're going to take a look. Right now." (838–840, [51m]) ↩
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Two short lines on the beach, then ninety seconds of silence — the only stretch of the film without institutional or conspiratorial pressure. (le cinema dreams) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson: "There is no physician in charge... I have no supervisor... There is no staff." (878–881, [57m]) ↩
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Each negation strips a layer of institutional normalcy. (cinebeats) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson: "What did you say your name was?" (885, [57m]) ↩
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Kelly: "I've seen how they do it. I know how it works." (893–894, [58m]) ↩
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Kelly: "You come down to maintenance tonight. I'll show it to you." (901, [59m]) ↩
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Vince: "They said make it look like an accident." (908, [60m]) ↩
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Susan arrives to find Kelly dead and the power crews working on restoration. (wikipedia) ↩
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The pantyhose-and-espadrilles removal drew applause at opening-weekend screenings. (le cinema dreams; movie nation) ↩
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276 seconds without dialogue — one of the longest silent stretches in mainstream 1970s thrillers. (wikipedia) ↩
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Guard: "Boston ahead by one." Wheeler: "That's great." Guard: "I've got $20 on this game." (938–939, [67m]) ↩
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Vince: "Hospital security, doctor." (941, [68m]) ↩
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Radio: "It's a high fly ball and... he's out!" (951–952, [69m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "I guess I have an overactive imagination." (954, [69m]) ↩
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Jerry: "It's a breakthrough in understanding the kidney." (962, [69m]) ↩
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Marcus: "Give him five cc's of water. Say it's morphine. He won't know. He's a pain in the ass anyway." (980–981, [71m]) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson: "Temperature here is 94.7 degrees Fahrenheit, humidity 82 percent." (1057–1058, [82m]) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson: "To prevent bedsores, patients are suspended by wires through long bones." (1062–1063, [82m]) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson: "Less than it costs to hire a baby-sitter for a few hours." (1091, [84m]) ↩
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Technicians arguing about corned beef on rye while running an inventory: lungs 1100g, kidneys 780/620. (1103–1125, [86m]) ↩
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Technician: "I think they're getting $75,000 for it... it was a bad match on tissue-typing. Only two out of four. But it's a rush order." (1128–1130, [87m]) ↩
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Technician: "They'll get 200 grand for that. It's going to Texas. A millionaire's son." (1132–1133, [88m]) ↩
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Technician: "The fastest routing is New York-Rome." (1144, [88m]) ↩
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Technician: "Good old George has the connections." (1134, [88m]) ↩
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Security: "There is an unauthorized woman in the building. Let's take her alive." (1153–1154, [89m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "There, there. It's going to be all right." (1172–1173, [92m]) ↩
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Mrs. Emerson on radio: "If she comes here, we'll get her. There's no way she can escape." (1180, [93m]) ↩
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Ambulance driver: "I got to make it in time for the Dallas flight." (1182, [93m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "It starts in the basement and it goes up the main tunnel, then plugs into the oxygen line in the ceiling that goes to O.R. 8." (991–992, [77m]) ↩
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Bellows: "I want to give you a Valium." (1006, [77m]) ↩
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Harris (on phone, audible past Susan): "That's a hell of a story, Susan. You really had a lot of people worried. Don't worry. Everything's going to be okay now." (1018–1020, [78m]) ↩
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Bellows (on phone to Harris): "She came back. No, she's here now. Of course. No, I can manage that. I'll keep her here." (1021–1024, [79m]) ↩
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Bellows: "You want some honey with your tea?" (1026, [79m]) ↩
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The bounded scene where the partner who said "I believe you" three minutes earlier has called the chief of surgery. (wikipedia) ↩
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Operator: "What number can you be reached at?" (1031, [80m]); Susan does not answer. ↩
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Harris: "I like a woman who drinks Scotch." (1202, [95m]) ↩
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Harris: "It seems you know everything." (1227, [97m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "You're George." (1228, [97m]) ↩
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Harris: "Society is leaving it up to us, the experts. The doctors." (1247–1248, [98m]) ↩
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Harris: "These great hospital complexes are the cathedrals of our age." (1253, [99m]) ↩
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Harris: "The individual is too small." (1265, [99m]) ↩
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Wheeler: "That's the drug." (1266, [100m]) ↩
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Harris: "It produces abdominal spasm and peritoneal symptoms. It must be very painful." (1267–1268, [100m]) ↩
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Harris (on phone): "Schedule an emergency appendectomy in O.R. 8. It's a member of the house staff, Dr. Wheeler." (1275–1276, [100m]) ↩
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Harris: "I specifically requested O.R. 8." Nurse: "It'll take a couple of minutes." (1315, [103m]) ↩
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Bellows fakes a page: "Patient on surgical two's got convulsions." (1328, [103m]) ↩
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Anesthesiologist: "I'm giving you Pentothal." (1343, [104m]); Harris: "Scalpel, please." (1354, [106m]) ↩
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Wheeler (voiceover, replayed in Mark's mind): "I found the oxygen line. It starts in the basement and it goes up the main tunnel and then it plugs in the ceiling that goes to O.R. 8." (1336–1338, [104m]) ↩
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Anesthesiologist: "Blood pressure's dropping. I don't understand." (1361, [107m]) ↩
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Bellows (basement): "Son of a bitch! Son of a bitch!" (1366, [107m]) ↩
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Anesthesiologist: "She's okay, sir. She's just fine, Dr. Harris." (1376–1377, [109m]) ↩
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Nurse: "Nice case, Dr. Harris." (1378, [109m]) — devastating irony. ↩
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The bounded intercut sequence where the post-institutional approach is tested at maximum stakes and holds. (the operating room climax (coma)) ↩
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Wheeler (groggy): "Don't let him do the operation." (1379, [109m]) ↩
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Bellows: "I know, baby. I know." (1380–1381, [109m]) ↩
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Police officer: "We're waiting for you, Dr. Harris." (1381, [110m]) ↩
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The film's final line — delivered by an anonymous officer, not by Mark or Susan. (afi) ↩
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The new equilibrium is the smallest possible image of restored authority. (movie nation) ↩
Sources
- Coma (1978) — Wikipedia
- Coma (1978) — Wikiquote
- Coma — IMDb
- Coma — AFI Catalog
- Coma — MichaelCrichton.com
- Ken Anderson — Dreams Are What Le Cinema Is For
- Kimberly Lindbergs — Cinebeats
- Roger Moore — Movie Nation
- TCM clip: To Prevent Bedsores
- Coma Film Review — Classic Film and TV Cafe
- TCM Diary: Coma — Film Comment
- Wiki pages: Plot Summary (Coma), Cast and Characters (Coma), The Duct Crawl (Coma), The Harris Reveal (Coma), The Operating Room Climax (Coma), The Jefferson Institute (Coma), Themes and Analysis (Coma), Medical Paranoia and Institutional Corruption (Coma)