Aesthetics of destruction in contemporary science fiction cinema
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Abstract
Mass destruction imagery within the science fiction film genre is not a new
cinematic development. However, a swell of destruction-centred films has emerged
since the proliferation of digital technologies and computer-generated imagery that
reflect concerns that extend beyond notions of spectacle. Through illusionistic
realism techniques, the aesthetics of mass destruction imagery within science fiction
cinema can be seen as appropriating the implied veracity of other film traditions in
order to create a baseline of visual credibility, even to the extent of associating its
own fantastical fictions with recent historic destruction events.
This thesis investigates the representation of mass destruction across the
spectrum of contemporary science fiction films emerging from around the world by
examining the various methods employed to affect the spectator. The study is
divided into four sections: realism, spectacle, sublimity, and correlation. It is
structured so as to escalate from the establishment of a baseline of vraisemblance of
the spectator’s empirical understanding of the world, to new representations of death
and destruction, whereby visual aesthetic correlations emerge between science
fiction and historical fact.
My study attempts to contribute to the current discourse on science fiction
cinema by focusing on the relationship between the aesthetics of realism and
spectacle and their impact on spectatorial affect. By re-defining notions of film
realism and the cinematic sublime, and through close textual analyses of a number of
contemporary science fiction films, the intent of this paper is to present a greater
understanding of the complicated inherencies borne by mass destruction spectacle.
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