The capitalist and cultural work of apocalypse and dystopia films.
Christopher, David
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We are living in a dystopia. Our world is the capitalist aberration
dystopia films depict. In his essay regarding the Canadian horror (and
semi-dystopian) film Cube (Vincenzo Natali, 1997), Angel Mateos-Aparicio
reports that "French philosopher Jean Baudrillard ... has argued
that the 'real' world has become utopian and that fictional
models provide an experience of what reality has actually turned
into." (1) Mateos-Aparicio goes on to observe that Cube addresses
"postmodern anxieties about the nature of contemporary social
relations, the purpose of political structure, and the consequences of
the predominance of capitalistic economy as the organizational principle
of human relations." (2) Indeed, much post-modern cinematic
narrative has been preoccupied with apocalyptic, post-apocalyptic, and
dystopian fantasies that closely reflect aspects of our lived reality.
These three categories are closely related in their ideological
underpinnings. Certainly they share certain characteristics, not the
least of which is a representation of the repressed anxiety regarding
the potential fall of capitalist culture. All are concerned with
horrific visions of a world in which patriarchal capitalism has been
either annihilated or corrupted, and all three function as warnings or
harbingers, cinematic realizations in the tradition of the four horsemen
of the apocalypse, of what must be changed and what must be protected in
order for patriarchal capitalism to survive. However, dystopia film does
not inherently require there to be an apocalypse, and these films have a
closer relationship with fantasies of utopia than do the other two
categories. This paper seeks to distinguish the boundaries between films
categorized as apocalyptic, post-apocalyptic, and dystopian and to
examine some of the most iconic cinematic artifacts in each of the
categories to differentiate their parameters and to explore in detail
dystopian film through the prism of cultural theory, to better
understand the cultural work that specifically dystopia cinema does. The
last section elucidates the different cultural work effected by dystopia
films that were produced before 9/11 and the more contemporary films In
Time (2011) and The Purge (2013).
Elizabeth Rosen succinctly describes the fundamental characteristic
of dystopia narratives: utopia "comes at an unspeakable cost."
(3) However, the fact that dystopia film presents an ersatz reality that
is ostensibly worse than our own works to ideologically mask the fact
that the horrific side-effects of capitalism in these otherwise utopian
worlds ganged agley are representations of capitalist relations that
already exist. Dystopia film is primarily concerned with the social
conditions inherent to patriarchal capitalism in which the narratives
simultaneously expose and reproduce social and economic contradictions
in an ideological process of repressive tolerance. Dystopia cinema
appears to criticize the damaging effects of self-indulgent capitalism
while positing fantasies of class integration. These fantasies offer
romantic justifications in which the altruistic tendencies of two
characters resolve class contradictions in a narrative trajectory that
ostensibly transcends capitalism and all of its evil, greedy
commodification. Decadepost-9/11 dystopia films such as In Time (Andrew
Nicoll, 2011) and The Purge (James DeMonaco, 2013) are significant
contemporary examples due to the way in which they realize explicit
capitalist axioms. In Time literalizes the capitalist axiom that time is
money, while The Purge effectively dramatizes the commodification of
violence in the convention of horror cinema. What these films have in
common is the way they operate in a process of neo-Marxist repressive
tolerance to criticize the aspects of capitalism that contradict
romantic mythologies in an ideological effort to reconcile these
contradictions with a valorizing fantasy of romance and revolution.
Neo-Marxist cultural theory remains an effective framework in which
to understand the cultural work accomplished by apocalyptic and
dystopian narratives, especially in the context of widely distributed
media commodities such as blockbuster cinema. In "Ideology and
Ideological State Apparatuses," Louis Althusser suggests that
ideology works to mask and displace any antagonistic forces that are a
challenge to the current system. (4) Herbert Marcuse's concept of
repressive tolerance indicates that the forces of dominant ideology in a
stratified capitalist culture tolerate a certain amount of critical
dissent in order to create an illusion of agency and to contain and
defuse resistance. In his 1965 essay, "Repressive
Tolerance'" he states that "what is proclaimed and
practiced as tolerance today, is in many of its most effective
manifestations serving the cause of oppression ... Thus, within a
repressive society, even progressive movements threaten to turn into
their opposite to the degree to which they accept the rules of the
game." (5) All of these ideological operations appear to be at work
in dystopia films.
Marcuse variously articulates the contradictory conceit of
dystopian aesthetics. He explains that
the true positive is the society of the future and
therefore beyond definition and determination,
while the existing positive is that which
must be surmounted. But the experience and
understanding of the existent society may well
be capable of identifying what is not conducive
to a free and rational society, what impedes and
distorts the possibility of its creation. (6)
He goes on to explain that
The ideas of the available alternatives [to the
social constructs in an ostensibly free capitalist
society] evaporate into an utterly utopian
dimension in which it is at home, for a free
society is indeed unrealistically and undefinably
different from the existing ones. Under
these circumstances, whatever improvement
may occur 'in the normal course of events' and
without subversion is likely to be improvement
in the direction determined by particular interests
which control the whole. (7)
Dystopia narratives appear to be highly critical of capitalist
aberrations but only do so in the service of repressive tolerance.
On the surface, the narrative, and even formal differences, between
apocalypse, post-apocalypse, and dystopia cinema may appear obvious.
However, some critics conflate the three genres as part of a postmodern
interrogation of the tenability of narrative genre delineations. Maria
Lisboa discusses utopia/dystopia narratives such as Nineteen Eighty-Four
which she says all maintain the convention of a "post-cataclysm
set-up involving an authoritarian despot or ruling power which
officially saves humanity from itself through the exercise of a
panoptical control that in effect in various ways dehumanizes it."
(8) Not only does Lisboa conflate post-apocalypse with dystopia in this
description, her artefacts are predominantly literary.
Many contemporary cinematic dystopia narratives are not
post-apocalyptic, they are merely post-modern. "In his work on the
apocalyptic motif in science fiction, David Ketterer defines any text as
apocalyptic which is 'concerned with presenting a radically
different world or version of reality that exists in a credible
relationship with the world or reality verified by empiricism and common
experience.'" (9) Ketterer's focus on the general
"apocalyptic motif' conflates apocalypse, post-apocalypse, and
dystopian narratives in this broad definition, and includes virtually
any cinematic science-fiction narrative ever constructed. Indeed, all
three genres seem to share a postmodern nihilism regarding the
dissolution of the particularly white male subject and the fall of
capitalist mediated social regimes. Thus, the primary difference between
apocalyptic and dystopian narratives is the fall of capitalist culture
in apocalyptic narratives and its full realization in dystopian ones.
Rather than annihilated, capitalism is over-present in dystopia
narratives as a perversion of itself. Nevertheless, capitalist fantasies
of aversion or reconstruction are very much at the heart of apocalyptic
fantasies.
Many American apocalypse movies are strange in that they do not
depict an apocalypse at all. Films such as Independence Day (Roland
Emmerich, 1996), Armageddon (Michael Bay, 1998), Deep Impact (Mimi
Leder, 1998), The Day After Tofnorrow (Roland Emmerich, 2004), and 2012
(Roland Emmerich, 2009) are concerned with fantasies of patriarchal
heroism and technological might in an effort to effect impossible
aversions of catastrophe. (10) Maria Manuel Lisboa observes this
convention in her chapter entitled "And then There Was Nothing: Is
the End Ever Really the End?" "The broad spectrum of fiction
and nonfiction on the subject of planetary destruction ultimately only
rarely envisages total annihilation." (11) She makes extensive
reference to the cycle of renewal that is implied in the book of
Revelation, in a world in which morality has been improved and restored.
Indeed, these American films seem to present a world in which a
conservative Christian ideology pervades their resolution. The hubris of
science or human arrogance is checked by the near-apocalypse (even
though it is frequently science that saves them), and the established
social order can continue free of its contradictions with the new
humbling moral knowledge. Lisboa states that
all scenarios of apocalypse are also morality tales
that conclude with the medium-term effects of
an opportune lesson well learned, and a new
ethic of intended non-repetition in the future
of past mistakes: moral recklessness, social dissipation,
ungodliness and hubris of knowledge/
power run-amok. (12)
Such a narrative trajectory reproduces ideological myths of
contradictory and stratified social relations rather than examining the
more fundamental and compelling psychology that would accompany certain
annihilation.
Many of the causes of apocalypse imagined in cinema leave room for
narratives in which aversion and redemption can occur. Lisboa points out
that one of the conceits of apocalypse narratives, in which absolute
annihilation rarely occurs, is that "All is as it should be, then,
as long as something still is." (13) In Jane Jacobs' somewhat
pessimistic Dark Age Ahead, she observes historical reality that is
congruent with these apocalyptic fantasies of renewal and redemption.
"Dark ages are horrible ordeals, ... But later on, life for
survivors continues for the most part as before, after having been
suspended by the emergency." (14) Plague or pestilence narratives
such as Twelve Monkeys, Francis Lawrence's I Am Legetid (Francis
Lawrence, 2007) (re-coded as Christianity triumphing over science
according to Zizek in his analysis of the evolution of such narrative
iterations as the original text, The Omega Man with Charlton Heston, and
the I Am Legend film), Zotnbieland (Ruben Fleischer, 2009), 28 Days
Later (Peter Boyle, 2002), and Contagion (Steven Soderbergh, 2011) are
all ultimately narratives of redemption in which humanity not only
survives, but brings the promise of renewed affluence with a rejuvenated
moral code. Similarly, narratives that focus on zombies or vampires
(again the iterations of I Am Legend, Night of the Living Dead, 28 Days
Later, Zombieland, and Resident Evil)-, or on environmental collapse and
the human responsibility for it, such as Cloudy with a Chance of
Meatballs (Lord and Miller, 2009), The Day After Tomorrow, and 2012 all
leave space for the survival of patriarchy and capitalism. Nuclear
annihilation movies such as Dr. Strangelove (Stanley Kubrick, 1964) or
its 1980s progeny such as the made-for-television The Day After
(Nicholas Meyer, 1983) are uncharacteristically nihilistic but still
inherently (and xenophobically) deal with the horrors of losing
capitalist American culture as it exists. Even collisions of earth with
heavenly bodies (Armageddon, Deep Impact) are subject to ludicrous
narrative fantasies of aversion effected by patriarchal heroes with the
reliable tools of industrial capitalist technology.
Nevertheless, apocalypse narratives still inherently represent the
terrifying possibility of absolute annihilation--a mass extinction of
humanity in which neither life nor culture survives. The fear of death
is amplified by the fact that there will be no continuity, no generation
of children to carry on the patriarch's name, mass annihilation and
the loss of the capitalist way of life. In this regard, movies such as
Take Shelter (2011), Melancholia (Lars von Trier, 2011), Last Night (Don
McKellar, 1998), and even The Quiet Earth (1985) are pleasantly
discomforting in their refusal to accept aversion, in their insistence
on certain annihilation. Melancholia is highly progressive in its
criticism of the capitalist-driven fantasies of the late 1990s. The main
character, Justine, suffers from an inescapable depression--a side
effect of capitalist culture--in a narrative that begins with a
representation of inevitable annihilation. (15) This type of fantasy is
congruent with an American viewing audience described by Timothy Morton
as experiencing ideological denial. "It seems for many people it is
easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism."
(16) According to Morton, then, even in a progressive fantasy of
annihilation, the ideology of capitalism remains central to the
narrative impetus.
Post-apocalyptic films such as George A. Romero's seemingly
endless cycle of zombie films (particularly Dawn of the Dead [George A.
Romero, 1978]), The Road Warrior (George Miller, 1981), The Matrix
(Wachowski Brothers, 1999), and Aeon Flux (Karyn Kusama, 2005) offer
similar fantasies of the way in which patriarchal capitalism might
survive and re-assert itself in a world where the 'utopian'
infrastructure of our present-day reality has been destroyed. The
primary distinction between apocalypse narratives and post-apocalypse
narratives is a temporal one. The former category frequently sets its
narratives in the present and explores fantasies of aversion in the face
of imminent apocalypse. The latter category explores the ways in which
the remnants of patriarchal capitalism attempt to reassert themselves
following some sort of global ecological annihilation (frequently
nuclear). The eponymous Mad Max, for example, a patriarchal hero played
by Mel Gibson in all three of the trilogy's movies, fights to
uphold a mythology of heroism, especially in Beyond Thunderdome. The
world of Thunderdome is simply an aberrant extension of capitalism, as
it was in The Road Warrior, both narratives revolve around the
acceptable and the unacceptable regulation of the distribution of
resources. In the unambiguously named Bartertown, Max is compelled into
a gladiatorial battle with a warrior giant named Blaster. Max refuses to
complete the execution of Blaster, however, upon discovering that he is
developmentally disabled, although uniquely strong, and under the
emotional control of an intellectual villain named Master, reproducing a
social stigma based on his ostensible sympathetic heroism. Max's
patriarchal heroism distracts from the fact that the Thunderdome is a
symbol of capitalist relations as they actually exist--a cut-throat
competition for power and control of the most precious commodities. The
narrative reconciles this contradiction with a fantasy of patriarchal
heroism and sacrifice. Ultimately, Max saves a band of orphaned children
from the clutches of Bartertown by destroying it with typical explosive
spectacle. His destruction of Bartertown codes him as a hero of the
children, a father figure under whom the lost children can thrive and
survive to rebuild whatever civilization Max deems appropriate for them.
Regardless of Max's apparent humanitarianism, however, he is an
unambiguously violent character, with a propensity to trade and gamble
for his own needs--a selfish patriarchal capitalist for the ages.
Perhaps the most saccharin example of post-apocalypse cinema is
Disney's Wall-E (Andrew Stanton, 2008). The narrative begins in a
future earth ravaged by ecological disaster brought on by excessive
production, consumption, and their inevitable side-effect, garbage.
Coincidentally, Morton states that "What ecological art will
certainly not be able to get away with for very much longer is
happy-happy-joy-joy eco-sincerity. This mode will look less and less
relevant, and less and less reverent, the further up to our necks we get
in our own waste." (17) In Wall-E, humans have long since abandoned
earth, and the planet (entirely depicted as New York) is solely
inhabited by its only custodian, the lonely robot Wall-E (and, actually,
his pet cockroach). The resolution of Wall-E includes the discovery of
humans surviving in space, a romantic pair-bond for Wall-E, the
vanquishing of the evil robots on a space ship, and a return to earth
for humanity with a new sense of planetary stewardship under the
guidance of Wall-E's altruism. It is a touching tale in which the
ecological annihilation of earth (at hand in our present reality) is
mitigated, indeed subjugated, by a fantasy that states we will survive
and overcome even a disaster requiring us to abandon the planet. The
evil of capitalism that caused the problem, so explicitly signified in
the opening scenes of the film, is mitigated and superseded by fantasies
of resolved loneliness and human ingenuity.
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Ultimately, apocalypse and post-apocalypse narratives are highly
ideologically similar in either their valorization of a patriarchal hero
that can save capitalism, or their canonization of human tenacity. The
post-apocalyptic film is little more than an ideological extension of
the apocalypse film in which the primary distinction is the mechanistic
movement of the apocalyptic event to a temporal position before, during,
or after the narrative proper. If the unthinkable were to happen, these
post-apocalyptic worlds become the cinematic arena in which the fantasy
of rebuilding patriarchal capitalism can occur. Morton states that
"It's seductive to imagine that a force bigger than global
capitalism will finally sweep it away. But what if this thought were
coming to us from within capitalism itself? What if capitalism relied on
fantasies of apocalypse in order to keep reproducing and reinventing
itself?" (18) With this aspect of capitalist repressive tolerance
exposed in Morton's rhetorical interrogation, the apocalypse and
post-apocalypse film are suspect in their ideological agendas.
The dystopia narrative steps in to continue the fantasy with a
narrative that appears less romantically nihilistic and more explicitly
critical. Dystopia films do not necessarily require the social worlds
their directors imagine to follow an apocalypse. Dystopia film frequendy
effaces the apocalyptic event and instead predicates its vision of the
future on intensified capitalism rather than annihilated. At the
beginning of In Time, proletariat worker Will Salas highlights this
aspect of dystopia. Regarding his aberrant social environment, he is
dismissive. "I don't have time to worry about how it happened.
It is what it is." Giuliana Bruno states that "The future does
not realize an idealized, a sceptic technological order, but is seen
simply as the development of the present state of the city and of the
social order." (19) In this regard, dystopia film is most distinct
from apocalypse or post-apocalypse. Rather than a single catastrophic
subtraction, through which patriarchal capitalism somehow survives, the
evolution of capitalism itself is the subtraction which begins the
process of a cultural dark age. (20) Jacobs goes on to state that
"the death or the stagnated moribundity of formerly unassailable
and vigorous cultures is caused not by assault from outside but by
assault from within, that is, by internal rot in the form of fatal
cultural turnings, not recognized as wrong turnings while they occur or
soon enough afterwards to be correctable." (21) Herein lies the
fundamental distinction between apocalypse and dystopia. Both recognize
the internal rot but apocalypse film denies and displaces it onto an
external source, a capitalist defense mechanism to protect its status
quo. In apocalypse films, an Other or external malevolent source is the
cause of human demise. In the dystopia narrative capitalism doesn't
need to save itself from apocalypse, nor does it try to re-establish its
patriarchal hegemony following one. It is a more direct criticism in
that it suggests a trajectory for contemporary capitalism if its
contradictions remain unchecked. Dystopia narratives are more
introspective: "we" are our own worst enemy. However, its
cultural work on behalf of capitalism is no less reproductive or
romantic.
A cursory glance reveals that the cultural work that dystopia films
do is threefold. First, they expose contradictions of capitalist society
which produces its own class-based inequalities. In Time for example is
explicit in its depiction of a stratified class economy in which the
working classes continually face near-fatal exploitation. Second, they
produce a fantasy of escape from class inequality. Frequently it is a
melodramatic heterosexual pair-bond that challenges the wealth and power
of the dominant classes--little more than a fantasy of Marxist
revolution. Third, within the progressive narrative framework of
dystopia film lurks the ideological underpinnings that reproduce
capitalist culture--a form of repressive tolerance. These films mask the
fact that our present reality is already dystopian by representing what
appears to be an even worse version of capitalist culture. Normally the
process of suture experienced by a viewer is amplified by cinema's
photographic illusion of an indexical record of reality. This is one of
the ways in which ideology, as it is described by Barthes, works to
masquerade as a naturalized reality. With dystopia film the opposite is
true; its representation of reality emphasizes a message that this only
looks realistic, but in fact is not. These films seem to celebrate the
extent to which they can make their false realities appear realistic. In
the case of dystopia film, however, the artificial indexical reality is
closer to actual reality than it is when such an index is working to
mask capitalist ideology.
The capitalist ideology with which dystopian film is preoccupied
comes to light through the neo-psychoanalytical approaches of Robin Wood
and Slavoj Zizek. In his essay "An Introduction to the American
Horror Film," Robin Wood defines reactionary films as those which
reproduce and valorize a conservative dominant ideology, and progressive
films as those which challenge such ideology (22) Dystopian fantasies
appear progressive but are covertly reactionary. They tend to imply that
the social contradictions they imagine are merely fantastical--that they
do not exist today. However, in Slavoj Zizek's A Plague of
Fantasies, he states,
the psychoanalytic notion of fantasy cannot
be reduced to that of a fantasy scenario which
obfuscates the true horror of a situation; the
first, rather obvious thing to add is that the relationship
of the fantasy and the horror of the
Real it conceals is much more ambiguous than
it may seem; fantasy conceals this horror, yet
at the same time it creates what it purports to
conceal, its 'repressed' point of reference. (23)
In this regard, dystopia film is just as reactionary as apocalypse
and post-apocalypse film. In fact, apocalypse film is ideologically more
honest. It explicitly valorizes capitalist mythology whereas dystopia
appears to be critical of it. In that context, the cultural work to
reproduce capitalist mythologies is all the more covert in dystopia
film.
Films such as A Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick, 1971),
Logan's Run (Michael Anderson, 1976), Blade Runner (Ridley Scott,
1982), The Running Man (Paul Michael Glaser, 1987), A Handmaid's
Tale (Volker Schlondorff, 1990), Gattaca (Andrew Niccol, 1997), I, Robot
(Alex Proyas, 2004), The Island (Michael Bay, 2005), In Time (2011), The
Hunger Games (Gary Ross, 2012), and The Purge (2013) are direct in their
criticism of the social contradictions inherent to capitalism. These
worlds, often in the near future (to the release dates of the films),
are not necessarily separated from contemporary reality by a fantastical
apocalypse. Certain social and economic institutions of capitalism have
merely evolved into what the films depict as unethical extremes. For
example, Bruno observes that such an iconic dystopia as that depicted in
Blade Runner "does not take place in a spaceship or space station,
but in a city, Los Angeles, in the year 2019, a step away from the
development of contemporary society." (24) In a discussion of Terry
Gilliam's Brazil (1985), Rosen reports that the ostensibly utopian
"New Jerusalem is only this same world, free of the terrorist
threat, a goal toward which the bureaucracy continues assiduously to
work." (25) Cinematic dystopia narratives are only apocalyptic in
that they depict a society in which 'utopian' capitalism has
been annihilated by either social or technological aberration. "In
each case the disaster not only unleashes violence and autocracy in a
variety of forms but it also reveals that such tendencies were always
already there." (26) These aberrations, at least in their nascent
forms, are already present in the 'utopian' capitalist reality
in which these films are produced.
Taking into account a feminist perspective on dystopian narratives
that imitate contradictions in contemporary society, Maria Lisboa
summarizes Margaret Atwood's novel A Handmaid's Tale (1985)
(made into a film in 1990). The main character, Offred, has become the
fertile concubine, described as a form of chattel (a commodity), to a
military overlord in a dystopian future where infertility runs rampant.
In the pre-dystopian world of the late twentieth century, "despite
holding a university degree, Offred was a low-ranking white collar
worker, whose colleagues, all women working under a male boss, generally
lacked full material autonomy. In the Handmaid's account,
therefore, women remain the property of men in both societies."
(27) This narrative example betrays typical dystopian artefacts in two
ways; it follows an apocalyptic war, and its society has little that
might be considered utopian to any but the most privileged patriarchal
few. However, even A Handmaid's Tale maintains the conventional
preoccupation of dystopian narrative with the further perversion of a
capitalist contradiction that already exists. (28)
Dystopia film explicitly criticizes capitalism in a process of
repressive tolerance through which the contradictions of capitalism are
reconciled by fantasies of romance and revolution. In "Spectacular
Recuperation: Alex Cox's Sid and Nancy" Brian Michael Goss
observes that "romantic love on screen clearly has ideological
effects; these are often reactionary, as Miller (1990) has observed in
the context of 1980s U.S. films." (29) Goss goes on to explain that
"Arthur Penn's groundbreaking Bonnie arid Clyde (1967) can be
construed as an antecedent on this score." (30) The mythology of
romantic revolutionaries established in the trope of Bonnie and Clyde
remains a narrative escape in which dystopia narratives are able to
reconcile the contradictions they highlight back into the ideology of
the dominant order--in this case a reactionary mythology of romance.
(31)
One of the most iconic and critically revered examples of dystopia
narrative that demonstrates this function is Blade Runner. Blade Runner
takes capitalist human commoditization of proletariat labour to an
aberrant extreme. Artificial humans called replicants have been created
to perform all of the menial and dangerous labour associated with the
corporate colonization of space. These androids are a cinematic
realization of Marx's concept of grundisse--the replacement of
living labour with 'dead' technology. Ironically, only when
masquerading as a 'moral abuses' agent for the American
Association of Variety Artists does the blade runner Deckard articulate
the proletariat plight clearly. Regarding her employment as an exotic
dancer, he interrogates Zhora with such questions as "Have you felt
yourself to be exploited in any way?" While her employer treats her
as human, albeit an exploited one, Deckard's task is to destroy her
because she is not.
However, in Blade Runner, the boundaries between the living and the
grundisse are blurred. The replicants seem very much alive and endowed
with all of the hopes and emotions of a living human. When Deckard
inquires after how Rachael can be unaware that she is a replicant,
corporation CEO Tyrell responds that "Commerce is our goal here at
Tyrell. More human than human is our motto." Yet the replicants are
fully expendable. They explicitly represent the subjugation and
exploitation of proletariat labour at the hands of excessive corporate
power. When they rise up against what Althusser refers to as the
repressive state apparatuses (RSA's) of the corporation and the
police, symbolized by the blade runner, a capitalist mercenary in their
service, the replicants are rewarded with annihilation with one
exception; the narrative ends with a fantasy that reconciles the
obedient replicant, Rachael, with an agent of the repressive state
apparatuses, Deckard, in a conservative heterosexual pair-bond which
normalizes a fantasy of upward mobility. (32) One ending depicts the two
driving into an idyllic natural landscape. The proletariat replicant
escapes into a romantic pastoral of nature with the disenfranchised RSA
agent. All is well. As Morton points out, "The profundity of Blade
Runner, and of Frankenstein, isn't to point out that artificial
life and intelligence are possible but that human life already is this
artificial intelligence." (33) Blade Runner tells us that we are
the exploited labour the film depicts, but that we have a place within
the system that allows for survival and romance.
The conflict that drives these narratives is premised upon the
unstable social foundation of their dystopian societies. In that sense,
the narratives are themselves already contradictory. As the societies
suffer their inevitable destabilization within the diegetic time of the
plot, one wonders how these societies could have been standing at the
beginning of their narratives--they are always crisis medias res. Both
In Time and The Purge resolve this contradiction by foregrounding youth
in the new dystopian societies; these narratives appear to be peopled by
the youth of our own immediate future. The societal instability has only
just begun. The effect will be the immediate dating of the narratives, a
small concern for Hollywood productions based on quick return profits,
but avoids the social instability contradiction which cannot be
explained in such narratives as Logan's Run, in which Logan is
apparently the first radical in generations of his dystopian world.
These recent dystopian films are different from pre-9/11 dystopia
in that they resolve their narratives by suggesting that the utopian
aspects of the social realities they represent, the inevitable promises
of the trajectory of our current capitalist reality, can be realized
without their dystopian side effects through the ongoing efforts of
heroic bourgeois individuals to mitigate their contradictions. Before
9/11, dystopian narratives encouraged a revolution against the social
contradictions they exposed, and concluded with protagonists either
escaping or destroying the dystopian society. As early as 1976, Michael
York as Logan was escaping his futuristic underground utopia to
earth's surface in Logan's Run during what looks like the
technological collapse of the underground city. In Blade Runner, Deckard
and Rachael flee their abysmal urban setting to a sunlit highway in
mountains of green. And as late as 1998, Jim Carrey as Truman in The
Truman Show flees his dystopian media prison to what must have been the
demise of the long-running reality show, and the obsolescence of his
artificial domed world. Gattaca is a strange aberration in this regard.
The hero Vincent/Jerome played by Ethan Hawke remains an entrenched part
of his dystopian culture, but escapes into space for a period of time
following which the viewer is lead to believe his ruse will be
discovered. He intimates that he has no intention of returning.
Following 9/11 the ideological work of dystopia film to both criticize
and reproduce the social relations necessary to support capitalism
intensified. Both In Time and The Purge feature narrative apertures in
which there is every indication that the protagonists will remain
resident within their respective narrative societies, now freed from its
dystopian effects having reconciled the narrative conflict. These films
resolve their narratives by suggesting that the utopian aspects of the
social realities they represent, the inevitable promises of the
trajectory of our current capitalist reality, can be realized without
their dystopian side-effects through the ongoing efforts of heroic
bourgeois individuals to mitigate their contradictions.
A decade after 9/11 the process of intensification matured into a
thematic distillation of explicit symbols. In Time, for example, is a
2011 film that depicts a world characterized by two popular dystopian
conventions; genetic modification has provided for a world in which
physical aging ceases at the temporal age of twenty-five, and the
exchange economy formerly mediated by money has been replaced with the
negotiation of life-spans to accommodate the contradiction of an
ever-increasing population in which everyone is otherwise immortal. The
film literalizes the capitalist axiom that 'time is money' as
a metaphor for the way that human capital is valued based on its
temporal labour input. In Time appears highly progressive in the way it
exposes a capitalist system of class stratification in which the
proletariat face the serious exigencies of poverty-induced violence and
potentially fatal living standards. It is more reactionary, however, in
the way it contrasts a fantasy dystopia against the viewer's
reality that suggests such a reality is already utopian. Furthermore, it
depicts a faux utopia still fundamentally predicated on a capitalist
economic organization, and in which its own contradictions can be
resolved through the revolutionary actions of a heterosexual pair-bond
in the romantic order of Bonny and Clyde.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
In Time represents class stratification through an urban metaphor
of isolated districts separated by military-industrial toll booths. The
amount of time/money/ life required to traverse each boundary becomes
increasingly expensive, a system designed to preclude the upward
migration of proletariat populations. The poor are kept safely distanced
from the rich and populations (in a world of potential immortality) are
controlled via increasing costs (measured in hours of life) in the
proletariat sectors. Proletariat worker, Will Salas, played by Justin
Timberlake, incidentally inherits over a hundred years from a
disillusioned member of the bourgeoisie seeking to meet his death in
impoverished Dayton. Unfortunately, Will's un-aged mother dies at
the hands of unexpected rising costs just moments before he can share
his new fortune with her. Now on a vendetta, Will uses his newfound
wealth to traverse the tolls and travel to affluent New Greenwich. While
there, he demonstrates a fearless recklessness in his spending of time
that is alien to the ambient populace. His behaviour catches the
attention of police authorities and enamors him of a young bourgeois
beauty named Sylvia played by Amanda Seyfried. Together, they play out a
combination of the 'Robin Hood' and 'Bonnie and
Clyde' conventions and incite a revolution in which the poor steal
time and the banks are emptied.
This resolution sounds unexpectedly socialist. Susan Sontag offers
an argument that codes the levelling of life spans as post-modern rather
than socialist. Sontag observes that the post-modern subject lives in
"an age of extremity. For we live under continual threat of two
equally fearful, but seemingly opposed, destinies: unremitting banality
and inconceivable terror." (34) Dialogue in the film makes clear
that not even the proletariat wish to change their economic social
stations. At the outset, Will claims, "I just want more time on my
hands than there are hours in the day." The proletariat classes
merely want life security and an escape from the daily terror of
imminent death. Likewise, wealthy debutante Sylvia, is so bored with the
banality of ageless freedom that she claims that she feels just as
psychologically compromised as Will. She adopts an attitude that life
without the fear of death is not worth living. (35) She goes on to claim
that sometimes she envies people from the ghetto. "The
'clock' is good for no-one. The poor die, and the rich
don't live. We can all live forever as long as we don't do
anything foolish." The leveling of life spans in the narrative is
not a socialist revolution but rather a social one. Proletariat and
Bourgeois protagonists Will and Sylvia are united in a romantic
pair-bond that levels and forgives all class exploitation, especially
after the humiliation of Sylvia's father, a greedy New Greenwich
patriarch, brings a cathartic fantasy of justice to the narrative. It
seems that the established economy will survive the narrative closure,
and the utopian effects of immortality, brought on by the capitalist
advent of scientific genetic advancement, can now be enjoyed by all
without any dystopian side effects.
Moreover, the racial and gender dynamics are anything but
progressive in In Time. Beyond the dystopian side-effects of youthful
immortality in which "many must die so that few can be
immortal," envisioned as economic class stratification, the
otherwise utopian society is almost exclusively Caucasian.
Ideologically, the film suggests that a utopian future will be free of
racial integration and blindingly white. Lisboa observes "ethnic
uniformity" as a defining feature of many utopian visions. (36)
However, her observation does not completely describe the utopian
vision. While other visions of utopia may be the ethnic uniformity of a
specific class (Lisboa lists none specifically), In Time is uniformly
white in its representations of proletariat and bourgeois heroes alike.
The only character of an identifiable ethnic origin other than white
with a speaking part is Borel's wife. Borel is Will's best
friend and a proletariat alcoholic with an infant child. His wife has
less than five lines of dialogue and is dropped from the narrative long
before its resolution. Similarly, the narrative reduces all romantic
integration to three couples, all heterosexual. In the pair-bond between
Borel and his African-ethnic wife, he is an absent alcoholic and she is
attached to their infant child. It is clear that Sylvia's father is
a political patriarch. His wife is irrelevant. In the pair-bond between
Sylvia and Will, he is the aggressor, the hero, the leader. She is
merely a bourgeois symbol and an extension of his narrative.
The Purge reconciles the capitalist contradictions it highlights
with even more conservative strategies of containment. The Purge
imagines America very much as it is today, except that it is
experiencing all-time lows of violent crime and unemployment. This
statistical utopia has emerged out of a cathartic social practice in
which the contradictions of excessive population growth and social
repression are resolved through an annual ritual in which "all
crime, including murder," is permitted for a twelve-hour period. It
is the year 2022. Under "the new founding fathers" the
diegetic media describes America as "a nation reborn." An
opening montage of urban violence is highly critical of American culture
as it exists now. Violence, a side-effect of capitalist class
stratification, has been channelled and contained to a single annual
event called "the Purge." Not only is this event used as a
controlled cultural catharsis, it has the benefit of unburdening the
capitalist economy of socialist considerations by eradicating
undesirable populations and demographics. Financial affluence is the
measure by which people are deemed expendable or not. Government
employees higher than an ambiguous "ranking ten" are exempt
from the Purge. Lead protagonist James Sandin, played by Ethan Hawke,
reminds his children of "all the good the Purge does,"
especially in the context of the financial rewards he has enjoyed
selling security systems specifically designed to protect the wealthy
from vigilantes on the night of the Purge. He informs his children of
the privileged status their family enjoys with a horrifically bourgeois
blind eye. "Bad things do happen tonight but we can afford
protection so we will be alright." Only the homeless and the poor,
hardly represented in the film, are the victims of the cathartic
violence the Purge encourages. Things begin to go wrong for the
Sandin's only once an African-American "stranger" enters
the narrative and they are besieged by racist and classist bigots bent
on murdering him.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The Purge appears highly progressive in the way it exposes the way
in which capitalist class stratification might produce social violence
and repression. Part of the way The Purge achieves its apparent
criticism is through the borrowing of conventions from the horror film
genre. Horrifically masked vigilantes with an irrational dedication to
their evil designs assault the suburban harmony of a bourgeois family in
a bleak environment of darkness and relentless suspense. The villains
who place the Sandin's under siege articulate an elitist
perspective as their leader encourages the Sandin's to release the
African-American fugitive in their care to them for execution.
"You're good folks just like us, one of the haves. We're
all fine, young, educated guys and gals. [He's] nothing but a
dirty, homeless pig." However, their victims are a strangely
conflated mix of an impoverished racial minority and the white bourgeois
protagonists. The Purge is a horrific vision in which this social and
political stratification is coded as terror and the frightening aspects
of this dystopian capitalism appear vilified.
The movie is more reactionary in the way it reproduces certain
racial social politics and suggests that the contradictions it explores
can be resolved with the perseverance of a strong, successful
patriarchal family leader, very much a convention of the conservative
American apocalypse film. The dystopian aspects of the America of The
Purge are mitigated by the romantic notion of a sacrificial father. In
his efforts to protect his family from the Purge vigilantes that have
infiltrated his home, Sandin is eventually killed. The violence that any
member of the bourgeois might experience during the Purge can be
overcome with the romantic efforts of a self-sacrificial father to
protect them.
The narrative concludes with a fantasy of integration of a
different kind. Whereas in Blade Runner and In Time symbolic members of
the proletariat are romantically integrated with members of the RSA or
the bourgeoisie respectively, The Purge concludes with the integration
of a deeply impoverished racial minority taking up authority as the head
of a bourgeois family. Following the death of James, the
African-American stranger steps in to save the family from the ravages
of their neighbours, jealous of the profit the family generated from
local security sales. One neighbour unambiguously explains this
motivation for her vengeful malevolence. "You made so much money
off of us and then just stuck it in our faces." The American dream
of upward mobility is at odds with the sentiments of the evil
bourgeoisie in the film, except, of course, for the bourgeois
protagonists. The stranger's heroism plays out as an ambiguously
sexually-charged alliance between the now widowed family mother and
their new saviour. True to the conventions of the horror genre from
which the film borrows, the narrative concludes in aperture. The
dystopian world of the Purge remains intact and rife for endless
iterations of sequels of the annual Purge.
Also true to the horror film genre, the movie works as a purge for
the viewer on an ideological level. They can experience the cathartic
fantasy of having criticized bourgeois affluence and capitalist
corruption, and having survived the horrific night the narrative
depicts, to emerge from the theatre renewed in their contradictory
capitalist social existence. The film is not subtle in this regard. In
an ambiguously cynical montage of diegetic radio broadcasts, the last
dialogue of the film heard by the audience highlights the success of the
purge in terms of heightened population reduction and economic
advantages, especially in the gun and security industries. Due to the
Purge, both of these industries apparently saw "profits in both
quarters." The viewer can depart the diegetic world of the
narrative reassured that such violence at least serves the economic
purposes of capitalism.
Both films appear to criticize their capitalist origins but work
ideologically to suggest that the America they imagine is not the
America of today. These films work as fantasies of displacement which
valorizes the capitalist dystopia in which we live, just as rife with
corruption and inequality as many of these filmic fantasies. The
simultaneous criticism of reproduction (of the social conditions
inherent to capitalism) in dystopia cinema result in a thematic
parallax. The films are both reactionary and progressive and therefore
either depending on your critical perspective. (37) The social function
of each narrative depends on the viewer's already present
ideological propensities. However, the criticism is explicit and the
ideology is covert and romantic. Ultimately, the reproductive function
of dystopia cinema supersedes the critical on an ideological level and
Hollywood continues to generate profit from the production of dystopian
fantasies that feed and satisfy a populace indoctrinated on capitalist
paranoia, especially following 9/11. As global capitalism expands, it
remains to be seen if international film industries will adopt Hollywood
dystopia narrative conventions, and whether such ventures will prove
more or less effective in their critical function; whether there is
international hope to escape the capitalist loop of ideology and
repressive tolerance, or whether the dystopia in which we already live
will become a global phenomenon.
Notes
(1) Angel Mateos-Aparicio, "The Symbolism of Synthetic Space
in Cube (1997): Postmodern SF Film as Consensual Hallucination," in
BELLS: Barcelona English Language and Literature Studies 17 (2008): 5.
(2) Mateos-Aparicio, "The Symbolism of Synthetic Space in Cube
(1997)," 2.
(3) Elizabeth K. Rosen, Apocalyptic Transformation: Apocalypse and
the Postmodern Imagination (Rowman & Littlefield, 2008), 81.
(4) Storey, Cultural Theory, 6.
(5) Herbert Marcuse, "Repressive Tolerance"' in A
Critique of Pure Tolerance, eds. R. P. Wolff, B. Moore Jr., H. Marcuse
(New York: Beacon Press, 1965), 81-2.
(6) Marcuse, "Repressive Tolerance," 3.
(7) Marcuse, "Repressive Tolerance," 5.
(8) Maria Manuel Lisboa, The End of the World: Apocalypse and its
Aftermath in Western Culture (Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2011),
101.
(9) Rosen, Apocalyptic Transformation, 76.
(10) David Christopher, "Constructions of Non-Diegetic Hope in
Last Night," in CineAction, January 2013.
(11) Lisboa, The End of the World, 53.
(12) Lisboa, The End of the World, 53.
(13) Lisboa, The End of the World, 73.
(14) Jane Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead (Random House Digital, Inc.,
2010), 7.
(15) Herbert Marcuse's One-Dimensional Man as well as Marxist
theories such as reification and commodity fetishism suggest that social
relations mediated by commodities are inherently flawed. On CBCs Empire
of Illusion, "Writer Chris Hedges argues that North American
culture is dying because it has become transfixed by illusions about
literacy, love, wisdom, happiness and democracy. Jim Brown explores
Hedges' ideas about the mechanisms that keep us diverted from
confronting the collapse around us"
(castroller.com/podcasts/ldeas/2809799).
(16) Morton, The Ecological Thought, 101.
(17) Morton, The Ecological Thought, 105.
(18) Morton, The Ecological Thought, 125.
(19) Giuliana Bruno, "Ramble City: Postmodernism and
'Blade Runner'," October 41 (1987): 61-74.
(20) Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead, 9.
(21) Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead, 14.
(22) Wood, "An Introduction to the American Horror Film,"
200.
(23) Slavoj Zizek, The Plague of Fantasies (London: Verso, 1997),
7.
(24) Bruno, "Ramble City: Postmodernism and 'Blade
Runner'.
(25) Rosen, Apocalyptic Transformation, 81.
(26) Lisboa, The End of the World, 94.
(27) Lisboa, The End of the World, 90-1.
(28) Cinematic dystopia narratives are often concerned with the
horrific way in which technology might be misused. In Aldous
Huxley's Brave New World, for example, human commodification has
been taken to an extreme. Proletariat workers are mass produced from a
single human egg in a scientific rather than social framework. "The
principle of mass production at last applied to biology." Aldous
Huxley, Brave New World. 1932 (London: Vintage, 1998), 23. Social
stability in this environment of organized exploitation is maintained
through a process of ideological indoctrination,
"hypnopaedia," (Huxley, Brave New World, 42)--highly
reminiscent of Althusser's critique of the educational system as
the dominant institution in the maintenance and reproduction of
capitalist ideology in (what he refers to as "the socio-technical
division of labour.") Louis Althusser, "Ideology and
Ideological State Apparatuses." marxists.org, 21, 5. Gattaca
(Andrew Niccol, 1997) explicitly represents the perfection of class
discrimination based on the dystopian chestnut of genetic modification.
The Running Man (Paul Michael Glaser, 1987) represents the misuse of
media technology and the exploitation of the proletariat. All suggest
the technological advancements the narratives imagine are not unethical
except when misused.
(29) Brian Michael Goss, "Spectacular Recuperation: Alex
Cox's Sid & Nancy," Journal of Communication Inquiry 24,
no. 2 (2000): 156-176.
(30) Goss, "Spectacular Recuperation," 170.
(31) Goss points to Ryan and Kellner's Camera politica (1988)
and Robin Wood's Arthur Penn (1970) for further argument regarding
the reactionary nature of romantic love on screen.
(32) According to Althusser, RSA's participate in reproducing
economic social relations beneficial to the dominant classes. Althusser,
marxists.org, 11-12,14.
(33) Morton, The Ecological Thought, 111-2.
(34) Sontag, Against Interpretation: and Other Essays., 224.
(35) Sontag, Against Interpretation: and Other Essays, 225.
(36) Lisboa, The End of the World, 135.
(37) Blade Runner literalizes this parallax. Deckard uses utopian
technology to extract an impossible parallax from a two-dimensional
photograph. He uses it to locate and execute Zhora. However, the
parallax occurs in the narrative at what might be the beginning of his
shift towards sympathy for the replicants.