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‘Tis An Ill Wind, Indeed...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, with hundreds of thousands
of people rendered suddenly homeless, potentially thousands
of people dead, much of New Orleans still under water, and
the property and economic losses projected to be $100
billion or more, you can be certain that there are
scriptwriters and producers out there already putting
together and getting ready to pitch a whole new generation
of reality-based disaster movies. A sad but true fact of
life in Hollywood, such as it is.
Hollywood has always had a fascination with disasters as the
subjects of movies, going back at least as far as D.W.
Griffith’s Intolerance in 1916, subjects have
included historical natural disasters such as the volcanic
eruption of Mount Vesuvius that buried Pompeii and
Herculaneum and the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, and
man-made catastrophes like the sinking of the Titanic and
the fire that destroyed the Hindenburg. And when reality
hasn’t provided enough examples, scriptwriters have
threatened the world with dangers ranging from giant
asteroids (Armageddon and Deep Impact) to
continent-shattering earthquakes (10.5) to global
warming cataclysms (The Day After Tomorrow).
Destruction and loss of life, or at least the potential for
them, on a large scale seems to be endlessly mesmerizing not
only to those who make the movies, but to those who watch
them as well. Nor is this a modern phenomenon; the floods
that are the central theme to both the story of Noah and the
epic of Gilgamesh serve as the settings against which the
narrations take place.
Some of this can be explained by the odd fact that while
disaster brings out the worst in some people, in many more
it inspires compassion, support, acts of kindness,
selflessness, and in not a few instances, outright heroism.
Few things stir up the passions of admiration and emulation
more than the imagery of men and women laying down their
very lives for those they love, for their country, or for
that amorphous and indistinct conglomeration, Mankind. In an
earlier column, I quoted the words of Jesus from the Gospel
According to John, and I think they are relevant again here:
“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his
life for his friends.” You don’t have to be a Christian for
that sentiment to strike a chord deep within you. There is
something in the collective subconscious of Mankind that
responds to this idea, so much so that we find it repeated
time and again in various ways throughout the religions and
belief systems of the world. Hollywood knows this, and
indeed relies on this and other strong emotional responses.
There is nothing wrong with this; in any artistic endeavor,
the object of the artist is to evoke an emotional response.
If he or she fails to do so, whatever it is that has been
created cannot be said to be art. (One exception to this:
provoking disgust does not mean that what has been created
is art. A rotting animal corpse can provoke disgust, but
that does not make decay an art form.) Movies that fail to
stir emotional responses of one sort or another (or perhaps
a full spectrum of them) don’t make it very far at the box
office.
I hope when movies are made about Hurricane Katrina that
they can capture some portion of the destruction and human
suffering that resulted, to help bring a greater
understanding of the magnitude of the disaster. But even
more, I hope that they will portray the acts of heroism, the
outpouring of compassion, the help for and the welcoming of
those displaced by the hurricane and its aftermath. New
Orleans will be rebuilt, along with the other areas of the
Gulf Coast that were destroyed, and that rebuilding in
itself will generate a multitude of stories and backdrops
for stories to be told.
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