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film
This
page highlights film dealing with surveillance and identity.
As with the preceding page it's eclectic not all-inclusive;
a search of major movie guides and specialist studies
will uncover several themes.
The page is currently under construction: we'll be adding
more pointers in future.
all
that is solid melts into air
The history of film is an essay on the theme 'you can't
believe your eyes'.
In The Net (1995)
plucky Sandra Bullock becomes an unperson when the villain
erases her existence from all databases. Claude Rains
in the 1934
Invisible Man merely goes mad once deprived of
his identity. Zorro demonstrates the advantages
of anonymity; North by NorthWest suggests problems
with mistaken identity. Blade Runner (1982) features
the 'replicant', indistinguishable from humans apart from
superior attitude and capacity to kick ass.
In Gattaca (1997)
Ethan Hawke engages in identity theft in a future where
DNA is destiny. There's a less willing appropriation by
a charming sociopath in The Talented Mr Ripley
(1999).
The problem for Gerard Depardieu in Colonel Chabert
(1994)
is recognition after he inconveniently returns from the
dead, an echo of the events discussed by Natalie Zemon
Davis in The Return of Martin Guerre (Cambridge:
Harvard Uni Press 83). In Some Like it Hot Jack
Lemmon invents a new identity to avoid lead poisoning.
someone
is watching
Enemy
of the State (1998)
reveals that "It's Not Paranoia If They're Really
After You". They're after Mel Gibson in Conspiracy
Theory (here)
and after the bad guys (ie those who aren't members of
the NRA or the Tom Clancy fanclub) in Tom Clancy's
Netforce (1998). The Truman Show suggests that
all of life's a stage but why worry when the rain, like
the trains, comes on time ... or is it merely on cable?
For the oneiric eye see of course Peeping Tom (1960),
2001 (1968),
Blow-Up (1966),
The Anderson Tapes (1971)
or most works from the strange Mr Hitchcock. There have
been several screen versions of 1984; arguably
a more successful rendition is Terry Gilliam's 1985
Brazil.
For denunciation the classic is Clouzot's 1943
Le Corbeau; Peter Lorre's performance in M
(1931)
is worth rescuing from the darker recesses of your DVD
outlet.
men
in black
The 1997
Men in Black reveals that your neighbour is a
bug-eyed illegal immigrant from outer space, with way-hip
dudes (love
the shades!) to keep the critters in order. It's a comic
twist on Holloywood's possession genre, from the various
Invasion of the Body Snatchers and vampire remakes
to horrors such as the 1952
My Son John (fluoridation turns your kids gay,
red or bugaboo du jour).
and
machines in blue
Per
Schelde's Androids, Humanoids & Other Science Fiction
Monsters: Science & Soul in Science Fiction Films
(New York: NY Uni Press 94 ) suggests that computers have
become "the lab full of hissing liquids was to Dr.
Jekyll: core signifiers that serious, potentially dangerous
science is in progress". You can't have a spooky movie
without a big machine at the other end of the fisheye
lens.
In 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) the omniscient
computer goes birko through frustrated love for the astronauts
(or is it Dr Chandra). In Colossus: The Forbin Project
(1970) the "paragon of reason" - equipped with a nuke
or two rather than the controls of the pod-bay door -
also throws a tantrum. In War Games (1983) the
clever box decides to leave megadeaths to Herman Kahn
and the boys at RAND after playing tic-tac-toe with a
feisty hacker.
paranoia
and conspiracy
We've
examined conspiracy theory on the next page of this profile.
Film Lacanians will enjoy Jerry Aline Flieger's 1997 Postmodern
Perspective: The Paranoid Eye essay;
most readers are likely to find Cyndy Hendershot's
Paranoia and the Delusion of the Total System essay
more accessible. For different jargon see Ray Pratt's
Projecting Paranoia : Conspiratorial Visions in American
Film (Lawrence: Uni Press of Kansas 01).
For political paranoia, decorated with the odd wiretap
and database, see The Parallax View (1974), Three
Days of the Condor (1975), The Falcon & the
Snowman, Hidden Agenda (1990), Hardware
(1990) and Netforce (1999).
next page (the
net and conspiracy theory)
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