Be honest. You love to be miserable. It explains the
popularity of dystopian sci-fi and fantasy. Post-apocalyptic fiction such as “Mad
Max” proliferates on screens big and small. The Undead in many forms haunt the
airwaves. Teen vampire love stories tell us something about what we think of
the likelihood of permanent happiness in relationships. Even in love stories
involving living characters, the most popular versions seem to be telling us
that it is hopeless, or at least, unlikely. (Eg. “500 Days of Summer,” “Titanic,”
“La La Land.”) The most frequently re-told tale of woe is “Romeo And Juliet,”
the quintessential teen love tragedy.
In classic Hollywood films, a common trope was the tacked-on
moral, the happy ending that mollified censors after the sex and violence
wreaked by malevolent characters won the first two acts and thrilled audiences.
The modern rom-com does something like that. In “Trainwreck,” Amy Schumer’s
self-shaming and ascerbic persona gathers most of the laughs until she melts in
the end, yielding to conventional love. We like her better when she is a bitter
pessimist about love.
The same is true of the Judd Apatow style of comedy, in
which the man-child goes through life getting high and palling with other stoned
losers until a serious adult woman comes along who demands change in return for
love. Once the motherly woman takes over, most of the hedonistic lazy fun is
done. The losers become strivers, give up their porn, get jobs, get serious.
See “Knocked Up,” as a template. The male stars of these films all have the
same personae; think Adam Sandler, Jason Segal, Will Farrell, Owen Wilson, Jack
Black.
This is a drastic change from the notions idealized in the screwball
romantic comedies of Hollywood’s Golden Age. As I’ve detailed in another post,
the most common plot of those films had one serious character being loosened up
by a free spirit. Sometimes it was a ditzy heiress who charmed an uptight man (“Bringing
Up Baby,” “My Man Godfrey”); in others it was the working girl heroine who was
freed to laugh by a man who often was a rebellious son of privilege. (Think Ray
Milland or Melvyn Douglas in any number of films.)
Of course, in The Great Depression, there were plenty of
films that reflected the pessimism of the age. “The Grapes of Wrath” is a real
downer; “Fury,” which is about lynching is chillingly bleak. Nathaniel West’s
novel, “The Day of the Locust” and Horace Mc Coy’s “They Shoot Horses, Don’t
They?” epitomize this pessimistic outlook.
In the 1940’s, after the real horror of World War, pessimism
in the form of the popular notion of “existentialism”—defined as “the overwhelming
sense of dread in the face of an apparently meaningless and absurd world”—took
hold in literature and films. The French label of “film noir” dominated the era
in Hollywood films. The popular films made of James M. Cain’s novels, “Double
Indemnity,” “The Postman Always Rings Twice,” and “Mildred Pierce,” elevated
the anti-hero and femme fatale to dominant status as iconic characters.
In the 1950’s, sci-fi found another cause for pessimism: the
atom bomb. Mutated monsters arrived from Japan to warn us that we were
tampering with Nature at risk of our survival.
In the 1960’s, assassinations, the generational split, urban
riots, and unpopular war marked the era and led to disillusionment and
depression. The “turn on, tune in, drop out” attitude was pessimistic about the
macro world, and tried to put a positive face on giving up on society by
turning to drugs, free love and communal living—which resulted in male
domination of lost women and led to frightening cults like the Manson Family
and Jim Jones. The uplifting “Jesus Movement” often turned to the apocalyptic negativity
of “Revelations.”
In popular music, Bob Dylan began as an inheritor of
Depression Era activism, but his innate moody disposition soon turned inward
and often dark. The Beatles began the era singing “All You Need Is Love” and
ended in “Revolution” and “Helter Skelter.” Monterey led to Woodstock and then
to Altamont. Morrison, Hendrix, Joplin were pop’s JFK, RFK, and MLK, Jr.
In the Nixon and post Nixon era, films reflected the mood of
paranoia and sadness: “Parallax View,” “Apocalypse, Now” “All The President’s
Men,” “Chinatown,” “The China Syndrome.” The inexorable monster of the era was “Jaws.”
In the Reagan 1980’s, greed and self-interest exiled
altruistic liberalism. The decade in films was ruled by Spielberg and Lucas,
with escapist, pre-adolescent, sexless adventure movies. (“Back To The Future”
was one they missed.) Of the top ten grossing films, the only “dark” one was, fittingly,
“Batman.” As reformulated, the dark knight of comics was far from the “Boom!
Pow!” TV caricature of the 60’s. He was an avenging vigilante who reveled in
sadistic torture of villains.
Even so, “Batman,” like “Dirty Harry” and “Death Wish,” reflects
law-and-order pessimism, a violent reaction to the perceived “permissive
coddling” of criminals—i.e. the Warren Court’s recognition of civil liberties
in criminal justice. “The Star Chamber” depicted judges who secretly got
together to condemn criminals who foiled the system.
One film that was not a great hit in 1982 was “Blade Runner.”
Its darkness was contrary to the trend of the era and wasn’t appreciated until
DVD releases gave it a cult following. The dystopian vision of a most noirish future
Los Angeles fit with the image of pessimistic futurists. The ambiguity of what
makes humanness as shown by the striving of the androids for life strikes a
chord with people searching for individual identity in a cold, impersonal world.
Philip K.
Dick died the year this film was released. His novels and short stories were
fixed in 50’s and 60’s issues: paranoia about a big brother government, the
implications of the drug culture, doubts about mental illness, reality, and
identity. His stories have been adapted often: “Minority Report,” “Total
Recall,” “A Scanner Darkly,” and the anthology series, “Electric Dreams.”
Spielberg,moved from uplifting adventures to darker futuristic
themes: “A.I.,” and “Jurassic Park.” “A.I.-Artificial
Intelligence” dealt with another futuristic choice between optimistic and
pessimistic outlooks. The notion that humans may create smart machines that
have emotions and make their own choices is fascinating and scary.
Recently, two movies have explored it in interesting takes
on the familiar genre male romantic fantasies. “Her” had a shy young man
smitten with his operating system—as voiced by sultry Scarlett Johansson, who
wouldn’t? “Ex Machina” uses the idea of the “Turing Test” to question the
android’s degree of humanity, and ends with the robot as femme fatale gaining
her freedom.
Both of these films expand the sci-fi form from its
traditional male fantasy to comment on issues of sexism. The adolescent fantasy
of creating a subservient, compliant, sexy female is challenged in both films. “Samantha”
in “Her,” and “Ava” in “Ex Machina” escape the male’s fantasy trap by their own
intelligence. Ava, in fact, is smart enough to use her attraction as bait.
While Samantha is more philosophical, mostly because she exists without a physical
body of her own, she manages to achieve a higher plane of “existence” than mere
humanity.
“Game of Thrones” is another example of drama with a
pessimistic outlook. The quasi-Medieval setting is almost always bleak and
forbidding. The action is often brutal and violent, and that includes it famous
sex scenes that sometimes end in blood. It is a cruel world where children
learn early to kill or be killed. The competing monarchs, especially the
dominating women are ruthless, willing to torture and kill their lovers,
brothers, (in one case, lover/brother) to gain or maintain power.
The White Walkers are a version of the ultimate bogeymen of
fantasy literature: the undead. We all fear the unknown and nothing is more
unknown than what happens after death. But in the usual story line, death is
the end, especially death of the villain. The dragon is slain, the ogre falls
to the hero, the tyrant is beheaded and his army surrenders.
Even in fantasies like “Star Wars,” the emperor, Darth
Vader, and innumerable henchmen, all meet their final comeuppance. Obi-Wan,
Yoda, and the redeemed Darth return in spirit to advise Luke to “use the force,”
but that is more sentimental than literal.
In the dystopian, post-apocalyptic scenario, the end is
harder to come by. There is a never-ending supply of undead to stalk the
living. In the “Terminator” and “Matrix” franchises, humans are threatened by
machines (i.e., computers), which are as inexorable as the undead. This theme
seems to derive from video games that provide a plentiful supply of henchmen to
dispose of as the user progresses through the maze to the next level in the
infinitely complex labyrinth.
The game can never be “won” because that would end the
interest: there must always be another, more challenging level to conquer. This
parallels the struggle we face in life: we are always like Sisyfus, fighting to
move that boulder up an impossibly steep mountain.
“We can never win; we can only hope to endure.” (I couldn’t
find the source of that wisdom; maybe I made it up because I believe it .
. . and so do you.)