LOS ANGELES: The end of the world once again comes to Hollywood’s big screens this summer, with movies ranging from big-budget action adventures to indie comedies putting their twist on the apocalypse.
Earth is annihilated after aliens destroy the moon, giant robots battle monsters, and in a comedy take on the biblical rapture, mortals are left behind to deal with atheists and spirits.
Oblivion, starring Tom Cruise and Morgan Freeman, starts the trend on Friday. Made on an estimated budget of $120 million and set in 2077, it follows the last humans as they prepare to find a new home on another planet.
“There’s an innate fascination with thinking about what life would be like after we’re gone,” the film’s director, Joseph Kosinski, told Reuters.
Oblivion will be followed in June and July by M Night Shyamalan’s After Earth, starring Will Smith, all-star comedy This is the End, zombie film World War Z and robots-versus-aliens adventure Pacific Rim.
British comedy The World’s End opens in August.
Bob Thompson, professor of pop culture at Syracuse University, said the trend may reflect a sense of insecurity among Americans, particularly over the economy, the environment and political gridlock.
“Americans do have an ‘end-of-days’ feel to them. Our civilisation is in decline, Congress can’t get anything done. The metaphor for the end of the world is simply an exaggerated story that deals with the same feelings,” Thompson said.
Social insecurity is at the core of Guillermo del Toro’s $150 million Pacific Rim, which puts a comic book spin on the end of the world with epic battles between robots and monsters.
Del Toro told Reuters that the film reflected larger social concerns and fragility including “global economic collapse, war and terrorism everywhere.”
Packed with special effects and human drama, apocalypse films have often been summer box-office hits, like Independence Day in 1996, Armageddon in 1998 and The Day After Tomorrow in 2004.
“In the summer movie lexicon, you’re going for the bigger gestures, the more operatic, the more acrobatic. You’re going for the big boom,” del Toro said.
But the apocalypse also has resonated with independent directors and comedy film-makers.
“If you’re doing an indie film that deals with it, you can do it beautifully from the perspective of a single family or a microcosm of the big event,” del Toro said.
New Zealand director Paul Middleditch has taken that approach with Rapture-Palooza, a quirky comedy made for under $3 million and out on limited theatrical release in early June.
“The film very much embraced the idea of the apocalypse at the end of your driveway. There’s something quite charming about the domestic-ness and simplicity of it,” Middleditch said.
There are more laughs in British director Edgar Wright’s The World’s End, about childhood friends who become mankind’s only hope for survival after a trip to the pub.
Another comedy, This Is the End, features Hollywood actors, playing themselves, whose party is interrupted by the end of the world.
“We’ve been telling these stories as far back as the Book of Revelation, if not further, and we’ll continue to tell end-of-the-world stories until the world actually ends,” Thompson said.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 22nd, 2013.
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