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For detailed information about the amounts and types of (a) sex and nudity, (b) violence and gore, (c) profanity, (d) alcohol, drugs, and smoking, and (e) frightening and intense scenes in this movie, consult the IMDb Parents Guide for this movie. The Parents Guide for [iOutbreak[/i] can be found here.
No. Outbreak is an original screenplay by American screenwriting partners, Laurence Dworet, MD and Robert Roy Pool. Although the story is fictional, it was inspired by an outbreak of Ebola hemorrhagic fever in Africa in 1976 and similar outbreaks in Virginia, Texas, the Philippines, and Italy. In the case of this movie, the virus is called the "Motaba virus".
That scene, which takes place 30 years prior to the setting of the movie, is supposed to show that Major General Donald McClintock (Donald Sutherland) and Brigadier General Billy Ford (Morgan Freeman) knew from the getgo that the Motaba virus had the potential of being made into a biological weapon, since they were the ones who recovered it when it first appeared 30 years earlier. They ordered that the encampment be bombed as they flew away in their helicopter. It was their goal to obtain a sample of the virus and then wipe it out completely so that no one but the U.S. Army had control of it.
The source of the U.S. outbreak was a female monkey, captured in Africa and illegally transported into the US. When Rudy Alverez (Daniel Chodos), the pet shop owner, refused possession of the monkey because he wanted a male, the monkey was set free near Cedar Creek, California. Unfortunately, the monkey passed the virus to both Rudy and to Jimbo Scott (Patrick Dempsey), the monkey's deliverer. Jimbo then flew to Boston where he kissed his girlfriend, and they both died hours later without infecting anyone else. Back in Cedar Creek, the virus was passed to a lab technician when a vial of Rudy's blood exploded in a centrifuge, and the lab technician spread it during a coughing fit at a movie theater. At this point, the virus was transmitted by direct contact, e.g., Rudy was scratched by the monkey, the lab tech was sprayed with the blood, the droplets of the technician's spittle landed on people around him. The virus subsequently mutated, becoming airborne, and was, thus, passed to other patients in the Cedar Creek Hospital via the airducts.
Although Colonel Sam Daniels (Dustin Hoffman), the USAMRIID virologist who investigated another recent outbreak of the Motaba virus in Zaire, is experienced with the virus and would be an ideal person to send to Cedar Creek, McClintock and Ford do not want him to find out that they knew about the Motaba virus from 30 years ago. Consequently, they claim that the Center for Disease Control (CDC) is handling the outbreak as a civilian problem, and they order Sam to investigate the outbreak of another virus in New Mexico. However, Sam changes his airline ticket and flies to California instead where he discovers that his ex-wife Robby (Rene Russo), a doctor with the CDC, is heading up the CDC investigation.
Because E-1101 was developed from the strain of Motaba virus as it existed 30 years ago and was ineffective against the newly-mutated strain.
Once Sam and Major Salt (Cuba Gooding Jr.) learn that the host is a monkey smuggled in from Africa, they frantically begin searching for her before Operation Clean Sweep is carried out. They break into a TV station and go on the air showing a picture of the monkey and asking to hear from anyone who has seen it. A viewer remembers a drawing that her young daughter Kate made of "Betsy", a monkey she says has been playing with her in the backyard. Her mom immediately contacts the CDC. They notify Sam and give them her address in Palisades. Sam and Salt fly their helicopter to the Jeffries' house, where they attempt to get Kate to coax Betsy to come out of the woods. When Betsy shows up, Salt shoots her with a tranquilizer gun. Unfortunately, Lt Col Briggs (Dale Dye) intercepted the call from the CDC to Sam, and McClintock is also on his way to Palisades. McClintock intercepts Sam and Salt on their way back to Cedar Creek and orders them to fly to Travis Air Force Base or be blown up, but Sam refuses. Salt manages to outmaneuver McClintock's aerial squads and get Betsy back to Cedar Creek where the antibodies in her blood are mixed with E-1101 to create an antiserum against the mutated strain of Motaba in time to save Robby. Ford tries to get McClintock to call off Operation Clean Sweep, but McClintock refuses, still wanting to keep the Motaba virus a secret. When Sam finds out that the bomber is on the way, he and Salt intercept it in their helicopter and try to convince the pilots not to drop the bomb. When McClintock orders them to stop listening to Sam and carry out their mission, Salt bears down on the carrier threatening a head-on collision. The pilots drop the bomb anyway, but over water, not over Cedar Creek. When McClintock orders the pilots to return for re-arming, Ford relieves McClintock of duty and places him under arrest for withholding vital information from the President. In the final scene, all of the sick residents of Cedar Creek are recovering, and Sam and Robby make up.
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