• Particles of Light : The Final Frontier of Film Turner, Stephen 2022 Film and Philosophy , Vol. 26 , S. 103 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1073-0427 | 2643-9239 10.5840/filmphil2021113014 Abstract

    This article addresses recent science fiction films about the colonization of outer worlds, or space-steading, in the context of the longer colonial history of the frontier. Paying particular attention to Interstellar (Christopher Nolan, 2014), Serenity (Joss Whedon, 2005) and The Wild Blue Yonder (Werner Herzog, 2005), I argue that colonizing outer space is not only a race to the new frontier, but that this takes place because technologies that picture space have quickened the pulse. Through its imagining of the end of times as a reiteration of colonizing adventure, and the emptying of people from their place, the technology of film has itself produced the accident (Virilio, 2007) of an uninhabited earth. As suggested by the cinematically derived kinesis of wormholes, space wrinkles, and warp speeds, what might be left as a form of life is none other than film itself. The hyper-kinesis of film spectacle takes on a non-human life of its own, which, in science fiction film, constitutes a form of self-alienation, removing viewers from the places they actually inhabit and displacing the histories they unfold. In this way, I address what is truly cinematic about the film frontier traversed by the new space of uber-masculine adventurer-settlers.

    Schlagwörter

    Applied Philosophy | Contemporary Philosophy | Semiotics

    Loading...
Turner, Stephen
Applied Philosophy
Contemporary Philosophy
Semiotics

  • keine externen Weblinks