THE
END IS NIGH
by
Gabriel Chong | 3 March 2010
Part
I: Why the Apocalypse is Big Business
Hollywood may not care much about the birth of mankind
and civilisation, but it certainly cares about its end.
Within the past few months, it has tantalized audiences
with three different versions of how the world would
end- beginning with the global cataclysm in “2012”,
to the nuclear disaster that led to the father-son journey
in “The Road” and finally to the catastrophic
war which precipitated the fight for the sacred “Book
of Eli”.
Were
it not for the outstanding box-office success of “2012”,
one would think that Hollywood is alone in its fetish
for death and destruction. But if the US$770mil worldwide
gross of the Roland Emmerich movie is anything to go
by, audiences sure enjoy watching the world end. That
would also explain the success of the costly US$80mil
Denzel Washington post-apocalyptic tale “The Book
of Eli”, which has since taken in more than its
budget in the United States alone.
The popularity of apocalyptic fiction is not new- films
about the end of civilisation have traditionally found
their appreciative
audience, and these tend to be science fiction lovers
enamoured with the idea of an agrarian future without
technology. Indeed, apocalyptic fiction has very often
been associated with the end of technology’s reign,
portrayed often as evil and malevolent. A classic example
of that scepticism is the Terminator series, the most
recent of which was Terminator: Salvation (2009), set
in a world where mankind is fighting for their survival
against machines out to exterminate them.
Apocalyptic Fiction and Nuclear Fears
Film history theorists say that apocalyptic fiction
became mainstream during the nuclear age of the 1950s,
as people started to grow aware of the real possibility
of global annihilation by nuclear weapons. They cite
the prevalence of apocalyptic themes and imagery in
Japanese manga and anime which they claim was the indelible
mark that the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
left on Japanese culture. Such works imagining a dystopian
society ravaged by the horrors of technology resonated
with the general public as they became an outlet to
express people’s innate fears and anxieties.
In the United States, the threat of the Cold War left
a similar imprint on popular culture in the 1950s and
1960s. One of the seminal works of apocalyptic fiction
during that time was Andre Norton’s “Star
Man’s Son”, where a silver-haired mutant,
Fors, goes on a quest with the aid of a telepathic,
mutant cat through a radiation ravaged landscape in
search of a city supposedly left intact. Despite the
inherent bleakness of its premise, there was always
an element of hope, of survival, and of re-civilisation.
This
was the duality of post-apocalyptic tales, which not
just told about how the world would end, but also how
some semblance of mankind would inevitably prevail,
the triumph of the human spirit against the darkness.
Cormac McCarthy’s definitive novel “The
Road” embodies such a spirit, telling its story
of a father and son duo’s journey across a devastated
wasteland searching for food, shelter and fuel while
maintaining their sense of humanity and morality.
Freudian theory
Freudian psychologists believe that the duality
is reflected by our two conflicting central desires-
the life drive (termed ‘libido’) and the
death drive (termed ‘thanatos’). The life
drive was responsible for instincts that sustain the
life of the individual and the continuation of the species.
It is these life instincts that motivate us to live,
to triumph, to succeed and to prevail.
The converse of this was the death drive, described
by Freud as an unconscious desire to die, and in opposition
with the life drive and its instincts. It is these death
drives that Freud believed was the cause of our self-destructive
behaviour and our attraction to chaos and destruction.
Post-apocalyptic tales, with their emphasis on the struggle
of mankind alongside the destruction of civilisation,
spoke to both the life and death drive inherent in each
one of us, whether consciously or unconsciously.
Religious symbolism
For
Christians however, movies such as “The Book of
Eli” have an additional significance- they provide
a secular context for understanding the religious concept
of the apocalypse, rooted in end of the world images
described in The Book of Revelations. Author Conrad
Eugene Oswalt in his book “Secular Steeples: Popular
Culture and the Religious Imagination” says that
the apocalyptic imagination in our popular culture has
supplemented religion in making sense of the finitude
of our world.
Oswalt also explains how such an apocalyptic imagination
takes root and continues to perpetuate itself. “We
see life around us and we observe it beginning and ending;
we know birth and death, and as we imagine our own birth
and death, and as we imagine our own birth and death,
we extrapolate and hypothesize world creation and world
destruction as a way to make sense of time and a creation
that outlives us,” he writes. In other words,
the apocalypse appeals to our egocentric nature because
it is a worldview that is useful in making sense of
our mortalities- basically to ease our anxieties of
why we die when the rest of the world goes on.
According to Oswalt therefore, our attraction towards
that apocalyptic imagination propagated by Hollywood
will continue
to persist, for it serves a vital function in realizing
the inevitabilities of life and death. So too is the
durability of this imagination according to Freudians,
since each and every one of us are driven by the dual
forces of life and death. Yes, either explanation only
suggests that post-apocalyptic fiction will continue
to enchant audiences with their end-of-world stories
and their concomitant portrayals of man’s fight
for survival.
So it may have taken the prospect of nuclear war for
the mainstreaming of apocalyptic tales into the public
consciousness; but they only took root because those
seeds were sown in fertile minds, minds which will continue
to crave for meaning, for life and for death. Whether
Hollywood understands this rationale, or buys into it
for that matter, you can be sure there will be many
more “2012s”, “The Roads” and
“The Book of Elis” in the months and years
ahead.
Continue to Part Two >
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