tonic
The place where good lives - good news, good style, and good deeds... more about us
Positively good.

news / projects

us / world / business / social responsibility/ technology / science / entertainment / life & style / travel

Apocalypse Now

By Ben Corbett | Monday, August 3, 2009 7:00 AM ET

Email
Share:

Add a comment Add a comment

Whether it's alien forces striking the planet, nuclear annihilation, or a runaway asteroid careening wildly toward earth, disaster movies have always played an essential role at the box office. And while mainstream movie critics seldom explore film's psychosocial impacts, in Hollywood Destroys the World, John Jurgensen and Jamin Brophy-Warren dissected a pile of post-apocalyptic films. As past examples, they mention "The Road Warrior" (1982) and "The Terminator"(1984), two doomsday smashes released as a new wave of Reagan-era Cold War fears shattered the once-calm American consciousness.

These days, with two wars waging overseas, as Iran and North Korea threaten nuclear development, and following a severe economic catastrophe, another batch of forthcoming films offer the same survivalist catharsis. Based on ancient Mayan prophecies, the coming November release "2012,"starring John Cusack and Woody Harrelson, concerns a global cataclysm and Americans struggling to survive a perilous future. Similarly, Denzel Washington stars in January's "The Book of Eli." An apocalypse survivor, Eli (Obama anyone?) traverses America, protecting the sacred book that will save humanity. Meanwhile, the sinister Gary Oldman attempts to destroy him and steal the only keys to salvation.

Film has always served as a kind of social therapy, an effective nine-buck salve for visual self-medicators. Take the blockbusters "Seabiscuit" (2003) and "Cinderella Man" (2005) for example. "Seabiscuit", grossing $148 million worldwide, examined the true story of an unlikely champion racehorse who against all odds became a symbol of hope during the Great Depression. Likewise, Ron Howard's "Cinderella Man", grossing $108 million worldwide, was about underdog Depression-era boxer Jimmy Braddock who, broken in spirit and with little chance of winning, rose to the top as another American symbol of the times. Both films were released shortly after 9/11 and amidst the desperation of the Dot-Com Crash of 2000-2003, reigniting the hopes and aspirations of Americans during heady, hopeless times.

Like the cyclical boom-bust economy, film genres come and go at the box office, but the thread that runs through them is simple. Faced with hard times of uncertainty and defeatism, Americans pull together and pull through the victors. Whether this is life imitating art, or whether these films merely provide a feel-good escape valve is another question, but there's no denying the tingling sensation electrifying the arms of moviegoers when the good guy kicks the bad guy's ass.

 

(Photos: Top John Cusack in 2012, courtesy Sony Pictures. Bottom Denzel Washington stars in The Book of Eli, courtesy Alcon Entertainment)

Described by the National Review as a "countercultural journalist out of Colorado," Ben Corbett has contributed to numerous magazines and newsweeklies and authored the non-fiction book, "This is Cuba: An Outlaw Culture Survives."

Email
Share:

Add a comment Add a comment

Sign up now for the Daily Tonic! We ship a dose of goodness right to your inbox every day.

connect with tonic

RSS

Twitter

Facebook

YouTube

good you've done

  • Helped Project Angel Food prepare and deliver nutritious meals to men, women and children affected by HIV/AIDS, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.
    Donated one year of Tonic Mailstopper to Project Angel Food for fundraising auction.
  • You helped Tonic plant 1,498 trees in North America, Central America, Africa and Asia.
    Tonic contributed to Sustainable Harvest International, American Forests and Trees for the Future.
  • Sent musical instruments to the U.S. Gulf Coast
    Donated $425 to Music Rising

...more good things