By James Bowman on 11.24.09 @ 6:02AM
Domestic terrorism, from Roland Emmerich -- and it's a shameless
blockbuster.
Not, I hope, to seem too much devoted to my one of
my pop-cultural hobbyhorses, but the attraction of apocalypse
movies to a mass audience seems to me to be essentially the same
as the attraction of superhero movies. Both, that is, are forms
of power fantasy designed to appeal to the younger -- and,
increasingly, older -- adolescents for whom Hollywood movies are
now made by satisfying the urge to be rid both of their feelings
of weakness in relation to the adult world and their sense of
helplessness under the crushing burden of the past. In Roland
Emmerich's 2012 the frisson of excitement
as we watch the collapse and utter destruction of the Washington
Monument, the Vatican, the White House and (as you will have seen
on the posters) the Art Deco Cristo Redentor
that overlooks Rio de Janeiro cannot be unrelated to a
general sense of relief at seeing the symbols of Western
civilization at last deprived by raw nature of their power to
intimidate.
If the monuments of other cultures than our own may be supposed
to suffer a similar fate in the global cataclysm the German-born
Mr. Emmerich so enjoys imagining, we don't get to see
them going down. But, then, Arab or Chinese or
African youths presumably wouldn't feel quite the same liberating
effect that our own do on seeing the glories of the past washed
away by gigantic tsunamis. Mr. Emmerich has exploited this vision
of hobbledehoy heaven before in movies like
Independence Day and The Day After
Tomorrow, so he has plenty of experience with the
formulae for cinematic apocalypse. He just has to put together
the destruction of all that history-book bunk with some
conspiracy theory and a few isolated nerds with an interest in
non-Christian prophecy who know the truth but are regarded as
crazy by the rest of the world. "We Were Warned" is the movie's
tagline -- though I don't remember being warned of
this.
The final element of the formula is an incongruous sentimentality
about a broken family's being drawn together again by their
efforts to escape the general doom. John Cusack plays Jackson
Curtis, or possibly Curtis Jackson, author of a widely
disregarded book about Atlantis that in some vague way may or may
not be among the alleged warnings. Jackson is a divorced dad
whose efforts to rescue his two young children (Liam James and
Morgan Lily) from the fate of 99 percent of the earth's
population generously takes in both his ex-wife (Amanda Peet) and
her new husband (Tom McCarthy), the chances of whose sudden
removal from the scene are obviously excellent. The result caters
to the childish wish to be free and powerful at the same time
that one is contained and nurtured. And the boy also gets to help
dad save a fifth of the post-Apocalyptic world's population by
being disobedient. No wonder 2012 did $65 million
of business on its opening weekend, a preponderance of that
immense sum having come from those whose discretionary income
comes in the form of an allowance.
The formula is also meant to remind those who like to be thought
of as "media savvy" that this is, like so many others these days,
essentially a movie about movies -- which is why it comes as no
surprise when we are told that its geological Armageddon is
"going to start in Hollywood." This is one of many little
in-jokes -- like having an Arnold Schwarzenegger lookalike on TV
reassuring the people of California that all is under control as
the hero says: "The guy's an actor; he's reading from a script."
Who cares that Governor Schwarzenegger will be out of office in
2012? This kind of thing also helps to remind us of the formula,
since we know that, in the movies, conspiracy-theorists are as
often right as they are often wrong in real life. Where would we
be without such classic lines of the genre as this: "All our
scientific advances, all our modern machines, but the Mayans saw
this coming thousands of years ago."
Likewise, Oliver Platt's de facto political leader
of the small remnant of Americans -- after Danny Glover's saintly
President goes willingly to share the fate of the rest of his
people -- muses wonderingly: "The nut bags with their cardboard
signs had it right all along" That's the classic paradigm of the
Hollywood holocaust and a necessary precondition for making a
hero of the high school nerd, now a grown up but girlfriendless
geologist, Adrian (Chiwetel Ejiofor). No prizes for guessing the
purpose of Thandie Newton as the daughter of the martyred
president, now that, in spite of Adrian's warnings, almost the
whole world has been wiped out. The clichés of situation and
dialogue help to reinforce our sense that the allegedly
spectacular computer-generated imagery of collapsing skyscrapers,
bucking and heaving mountain ranges or the Pacific Plate's
cracking loose along the San Andreas fault and tipping into the
ocean like a cascade of giant ice cubes are by now clichés as
well. The latter may not have been portrayed before, but the
technology of the kid-movie made it inevitable that it would be
sooner or later.
This movie's politics are adolescent too, though of course that's
no liability these days, given that our national politics are
also dominated by fantasy. The oriental wisdom of the Chinese
grandma who agrees to take on the party containing our heroes
when they are stranded in the Himalayas about sums it up: "We are
all children of the Earth. We will take them all." This
prefigures the same decision, after the urgings of hero Adrian on
the TV monitor in his Chinese-built ark. "The moment when we stop
fighting for each other, that's when we lose our humanity," he
says. "Everybody out there has died in vain if we start our
future with an act of cruelty." Remind you of anything? Of
course, everyone advises that opening the gates of the ark to the
locals who are understandably unhappy to have been excluded will
lead to disaster but, equally of course, it doesn't. As in
Obamaland, it seems, politics never presents us with any hard
choices. Being nice and kind and moral and unselfish comes
without any cost -- at least to our heroes.
For what it's worth, parents ought to be aware that allowing
their children to attend the latest propaganda effort on behalf
of such fashionable one-worldism will also expose them to a
certain amount of -- mostly implicit -- anti-Americanism. The
collapse of the Washington Monument, along with so much else,
doesn't come untinged with malice. It's also interesting that the
land of "can-do" only a generation or so ago is now more like the
"pitiful helpless giant" of Richard Nixon's nightmare. When the
remnant of humanity -- and a Noah's ark sampling of animals --
has to be herded into movie's own, apocalypse-proof arks, it's
Chinese engineering, not American, that proves equal to the task.
"Leave it to the Chinese," says somebody. "I didn't think we
could do it in the time available." That sounds to me like a
self-fulfilling prophecy. For a start, all our best technical
talent has given up working on military hardware and is now
concentrating on computer-generated imagery.