The colonial/imperial paradigm did not die with the
formal end of colonialism . . . Indeed, one could speak of a
"submerged" imperial presence in many films.
— Ella Shohat and
Robert Stam, Unthinking Eurocentrism
Toward the end of the climactic scene of Gladiator,
Maximus is either dead or dying on the Colosseum floor, the republic
may or may not be restored, and Lucilla is revealed to be ...
wearing a terrific strappy sandal. And don’t think the ladies in the
audience didn’t notice. Kenneth Cole makes a version of the Roman
sandal and now can’t keep enough of them in stock.
—"When in Rome,"
Newsweek
Introduction:
In his essay "Cowboys and Free Markets," Stanley
Corkin historically situates U.S. imperial discourses in the Western
film genre. Popular during a time of post-war U.S. global
expansionism, the Western re-elaborates the cultural "need for
settlement and nationalism" (68). According to Corkin, this thematic
appears in all Westerns. But the post-World War II era in America
makes particular use of the genre: "the repressed dimension of
westerns is their relationship to imperialism—and it is their
indirect means of considering such activity that makes them the
genre of the period" (71). During the post-war shift toward an
aggressive U.S. expansionism (militarily, economically, and
politically), a suitable cultural metaphor for explaining national
policy to the larger population was found in the frontier trope of
the Western. The geography of the old-west is physically outside
socialization and civilization, and it provides a place "in which
individuals of magnitude can assert their sense of order" (72).
But this isn’t the 50s. And the agents of order no
longer ride horses. The films of the 50's facilitated a national and
cultural discourse of discovery and conflict during a burgeoning
Cold War. But the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1980s
seemingly left the U.S. a "Global Leader" (as our policy makers like
to remind us). And if post-war Hollywood set the stage and reassured
a United States audience that working towards global market
expansionism was a worthy project, then our current cinematic
narratives facilitate a different role now that the global
boundaries have been penetrated.
This essay hopes to illustrate the ways in which
recent Academy Award winners for Best Picture like American Beauty
(1999) and Gladiator (2000) re-elaborate for the "American"
consumerist audience that Western and capitalist models of the
social arena should inform the current phase of globalization. Such
a claim entails at least two parts: the choice of films, and their
distinct role in the larger discourse on globalization. My decision
to restrict this analysis to the millennial Academy Award winners
for Best Picture is not haphazard. The Awards bestow a degree of
popular prestige upon the winning films, helping to label them, for
both national and international publics, as films worthy of being
seen. Secondly, the winning of the Academy Award for Best Picture
also allows the movies a second circulation. For our purposes, this
often means a guaranteed re-distribution of the film’s surface and
sublimated narratives to a mass audience.[1]
These films possess an influential ideological role
precisely because of their notoriety. Through wide distribution and
circulation networks, they offer a particular image of the world to
the U.S. audience. That is, these films can be read in terms of
their contribution to a particularly "American" discourse on the
varied material, economic, political, and cultural networks that are
Globalization (even though globalization may not be the surface
theme of their narratives). And while we tend to think of
globalization in terms of "networks," or as a process resisting the
linear operations of power and constructions of meaning that defined
traditional frameworks of imperialism, Western capitalist countries,
and the U.S. especially, exert a tremendous pressure on the flow of
these networks.[2] These films play a political role by indirectly
reaffirming the validity of that potentially Imperial pressure. But
I am also interested in these films precisely because they may offer
a more complicated representation of the current phase of
globalization. Targeting a U.S. audience requires the discourse of
globalization to follow at least two, sometimes simplistic and
sometimes ambiguous, currents. One current finds its voice in images
of cosmopolitanism and the seemingly natural spread of Western-style
democracy (capitalism) across the world; the other current is
sometimes invoked in images of individualism and affluence which
openly ignore the history of imperialist relationships which inform
an imbalance in global wealth. These two turn-of-the-millennium
Award winners for Best Picture demonstrate, I think, each of these
trends and a shift towards a new imperial humanitarianism. That is,
they mask these imperial currents within seemingly anti-imperial,
humanitarian narratives (such as the critique of soulless
materialism in American Beauty and the struggle out of slavery and
against oppression in Gladiator).
Globalization and Film for a U.S. Audience
Globalization is both a popular and contested
concept. By invoking the term, Western scholars and policymakers
often paint a picture of world relations that favor, in the words of
Anthony Giddens, "social connections across time and space" that
appear mutually reciprocal: "a dialectical process" (64). This image
of world connectivity quietly ignores that Western transnational
corporations remain the principal beneficiaries of globalization.
Indeed, it can be argued that it takes a single global power before
globalization has a possibility of being realized. I am not
suggesting that this global power is total (although that may be its
secret desire). Homi Bhabha’s sense that "hybridity intervenes in
the exercise of authority" (114) marks out the ambivalent and
non-totalizing effect of colonial desire and discourse on local
cultures. Yet, there is remarkably little confusion that
globalization does not mean the globalization of socialism, for
example. In its current form, globalization undeniably exclaims
capitalism as its master-narrative. Fernando Coronil calls this
phenomenon the "globalcentrism" of neoliberal capitalism. It is the
exploitive, expansion-driven nature of globalcentrism that finds a
functional continuity with imperialism. The discourse of
globalization, according to Coronil, evokes "the potential equality
and uniformity of all peoples and cultures" at the same time "it
conceals the highly concentrated sources of power from which it
emanates" (369). It is precisely this ambivalence that both American
Beauty and Gladiator re-articulate. Coronil has no druthers calling
this "a particularly pernicious imperialist modality of domination"
(369). As such, when I analyze the sublimated imperialist narratives
in the two films, I am specifically concerned with how these
narratives both reaffirm and problematize capitalist logics in the
discourse of globalization.
Globalization’s relationship with capitalism is
perhaps its least divisive issue. Liu Kang argues it is "capitalism
disguised" (164). Masao Miyoshi, insisting global interconectedness
is centuries old, distinguishes this current phase in its "expansion
in the trade and transfer of capital" (248). Both Anthony Giddens
and John Tomlinson situate globalization in modernity, a key feature
of which is capitalism. If capitalism’s logics are at the very heart
of the current model of globalization, then the same act of
justifying the disproportionate distribution of resources and
imbalances of power that informs capitalism will surface in the
affluent discourse of globalism. This asymmetry is the focus of
Tomlinson’s definition of globalization as complex connectivity: an
"ever-densening network of interconnections and interdependences"
(2). A language of dependency interrupts Giddens’ sense of a mutual
dialectic by drawing in the material tensions of globalization.
Whereas Giddens assumes that interconnections between the local and
global take place dialectically—a conceptual framework which
seemingly exonerates global power brokers from any neo-colonialist
guilt—Tomlinson’s model complicates this simple notion of global
connectivity. He sees in globalization an "unbalanced dialectic"
(61), held in place partly by the "imaginative poverty" (136) of the
affluent concerning exploited others.[3] What begins to surface in
the discussion of globalization are two images of interconnection:
connections of access and connections of dependency/responsibility.
The latter is reciprocal, and thus allows our popular discussions of
globalization to escape "globalcentrism" and foreground the
interrelationships binding distant locales in networks of mutual
responsibility (and hence, parity). The former is imperial and
expansionist, and it is an image of globalization wherein a
relatively few political, cultural, and economic powers presume a
"right" to access distant locales or to define the interconnections
which mark globalization in a manner dismissive of its real
imbalance.
Cinema brings an interesting complication into this
analytic project. First, the global media industry, of which cinema
is a significant part, carries both a material and ideological role
in globalization. Herman and McChesney explain, "although global
media are only one part of the overall expansion and spread of an
incresingly integrated global corporate system . . . [their] news
and entertainment provide an informational and ideological
environment that helps sustain the political, economic, and moral
basis for marketing goods and for having a profit driven social
order" (10). In addition, the message of globalism itself is
multilayered. At one moment it ushers the values of capitalism and
consumerism to, in the words of Rupert Murdoch, "the farthest
reaches of the Globe,"[4] at the same time it reassures its imperial
audience that their role as the beneficiaries of an imbalanced
global politic is both innocent and necessary. Cinematic images help
to inform a culture about its relationship to the rest of the world.
And since the dominant European and American film industry
"inherited and disseminated a hegemonic colonial discourse" (Shohat
& Stam, 103), a productive critical analysis should begin by reading
the tensions and connections between the "American" audience and the
"imperial filmic fictions" (103) distributed by the culture
industry: fictions which help to shore-up a model of globalcentrism.
The analysis of U.S. film and its many-faceted role
in the discourse of globalization should carry a sense of urgency.
Although cinema is only one aspect of a now horizontally integrated
media system, it remains the site of the largest revenues according
to the 2000 financial reports of TimeWarner, Disney, NewsCorp, and
Viacom, (30%, 24%, 27%, and 36% respectively). This should not be
taken lightly. That is, the transnational corporations’ contribution
to a particularly corporate and dominant discourse of globalization
can find its largest voice in the basket where the media
conglomerates keep most of their eggs.[5] What is important to
stress is that the political economy of the entertainment industry
is, to use Michel Foucault’s phrase, an indispensable corollary to
the cultural logic of globalization disseminated to the broader
public.
More so, critical scholarship must now move beyond
analyses of movies whose narratives do little to mask their
affirmation of the imperial enterprise—movies like Raiders of the
Lost Ark (1984), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), The Jungle Book (1942),
Passage to India (1984), and the Columbus films are popular
examples[6]—and begin to interrogate those cinematic narratives
which sublimate vital dimensions of an imperialist logic. Are we to
read the 1998 blockbuster You’ve Got Mail (its title has
globalization written all over it) as an apolitical, non-imperial
fiction simply because there are no "otherized peoples" in the film?
Or, should we read it as an imperial fiction par excellence because
it has normalized affluence to such a degree that we no longer need
to acknowledge the fruits of imperialism that the characters have
inherited? Meg Ryan’s character lives in a trendy 1,200 square foot
apartment on the upper West-side (something only the wealthy can
afford), and the narrative centers upon a budding relationship which
grows when a national bookstore chain runs a local store out of
business. This is the sublimated discourse of globalization of which
a post-Vietnam U.S. public remains the primary audience; a public
who would only cautiously admit that being the world’s only
remaining superpower shares functional similarities to being a
global Empire; an audience who firmly believes in the rhetoric of
democracy and freedom and imagines their global role as one in
opposition to imperialism; the first audience who must be
aggressively—yet indirectly—reassured that an asymmetric model of
globalization is indeed a worthy mission.[7]
American Beauty (1999)
If one were to accept a majority of critical
responses to Sam Mendes’ American Beauty, then one might be left
with the idea that the film is a poignant, hard-hitting attack on
the superficiality of suburban life. That the prestigious Motion
Picture Academy awarded it the prized Oscar for best motion picture
should clue the viewer into the existence of a very different
sub-narrative. Yet, a majority of the critical reviews have targeted
the film’s conventional depiction of the "suburban labyrinth of
bickering husbands and wives" (Gordineir 129). The Washington Post
calls it "a scalding satire of the suburban myth" (Kempley C1). It’s
a movie about the "dark underbelly" of "suburban madness" (Romney
46); it is a "hoary cliche of suburban soullessness" (West 49); it
shows middle-class America as a "plastic prison" (Glieberman 49);
The Economist argues that "the film simply recycles a view of the
suburbs—that they are vortexes of tedium and alienation" (36); and
Cineaste says it is a movie which aims "to skewer vulgar
manifestations of status and rampant materialism" (Arthur 51) that
plague suburbia. Unlike these reviews, I see two images of American
affluence in Beauty. The first is its "humanitarian" implication:
excessive materialism and over-consumption is empty and bad. The
other is its "imperial" thrust: affluence is common, pre-ordained,
and requires no recognition or responsibility to the history and
current practices of globalization that leave the U.S. consuming
over forty percent of the world’s resources. That is, we should not
mistake the film’s superficial critique of suburban sprawl as a
critique of global capitalist sprawl.
At one level, Beauty plays off an image of flat,
empty materialism (and the "beauty" that several characters find in
the now-famous image of an empty, floating shopping bag clearly
illustrate the operational logic of an imperialism that pretends it
is something other than imperialism). The film’s first image is
grainy video of a young girl—made pale and unalive by the pasty-tint
of the video—speaking to her boyfriend/the camera, asking him/us to
kill her father. Video images in film can operate to create a sense
of the "real" (we all use video cameras to capture moments of our
own real lives) at the same time invoking superficiality and
flatness. The poor image quality of video always calls attention to
itself as a re-construction of reality, especially when contrasted
to the clarity and depth of the celluloid image. The pasty-video
image then cuts to the blood-red title, "American Beauty," creating
an immediate sense of ideological and visual irony. This tension is
furthered in the following cut, which brings us to an overhead view
of a nondescript suburban street. We hear the voice-over of our
suburban hero, a 1990's Willy Lowman: "In a year I’ll be dead. . . .
But in a way, I’m dead already." The opening sequence, from
wasting-a-life, to title, to waste-land, to a pronouncement of the
living death that is suburbia, invites the U.S. audience to critique
the emptiness that is their affluence.
But this critique is short-lived. The suburban hero,
Lester Burnham (Kevin Spacey)—through whose eyes we see the
world—finds most of life’s gratification in moments of
self-gratification. Almost immediately, we see Lester masturbating
in the shower, with his/our voice-over subconscious explaining "This
is the highlight of my day. It’s all down hill from here." His
sexual obsession with his daughter’s under-aged friend, Angela (Mena
Suvari), becomes the central desire and drive furthering the film’s
plot. He quits his job, buys his dream car, starts pumping weights,
obsesses over his body, and begins smoking high-grade, genetically
altered pot. In one of his cathartic epiphanies, he confronts his
wife, Carolynn (Annette Benning), saying "This hasn’t been a
marriage for years, but you were happy as long as I kept my mouth
shut. Well guess what? I’ve changed. And the new me whacks off when
he feels horny." In a misleading critique of suburbia, the film
presents an image of freedom-from-soulless-materialism that can be
achieved through the self-gratification which defines Western
consumption and materialism.
This ambiguity in American Beauty entices the U.S.
audience to despise the materiality that informs their suburban
angst while indirectly asking them to accept a "norm" of American
wealth that allows our everyday-Joe-protagonist to afford
$2,000-a-bag pot. In the face of unemployment, the plot conveniently
lets Lester blackmail his employer for a full year’s salary and
adopt the lifestyle of the self-sufficient. Has unemployment ever
been so rewarding? His financial prosperity, we are led to believe,
comes from this moment of ingenuity, and not from the history of
exploitation, slavery, racism, and imperialism that has made him—as
an affluent white, middle-class male—the beneficiary of historical
relations of domination. And yet we are invited to sympathize with
Lester-as-victim. This dual narrative in American Beauty—hate your
consumerism, feel no guilt for your consumerism—parallels Liebes and
Katz’s claims about the television series Dallas’s overseas
reception. They argue that, "Indeed, a clue to the pervasiveness of
American programs overseas may lie in their ‘openess’ to
negotiation" (4), and that in the context of viewing Dallas, there
is both the "viewers’ moral repudiation of Dallas’s worldly success
and the notion that it is what everyone dreams of" (54). The same "openess"
operates in American Beauty. The film provides a critique of the
materialistic suburban lifestyle that does not disrupt the logic of
globalcentrism benefitting the U.S. audience.
Gary Hentzi insists that Beauty’s morose depiction
of suburban materialism is nothing new in Hollywood. But he also
finds irony in the film’s image of suburban barrenness and the
social complacency of the film’s real suburban viewers.
The suburbs have been so frequently ridiculed on the
score of crass materialism and abject conformity over the past 50
years that it is a wonder their residents do not rise up, wielding
hedge trimmers and pruning shears, to exact revenge on their
metropolitan tormenters. At the very least, it should be obvious
that a film has to do more than work over such hackneyed themes to
command our attention. (46)
Unlike Hentzi, my analysis illustrates that Mendes’
film does more than just ridicule suburbia. While barefaced imperial
narratives pit, according to Abdul JanMohamed, "civilized societies
against the barbaric aberrations of an Other" (91), contemporary
fictions of globalization aimed at the affluent exonerate the
beneficiaries from any guilt associated with imperialism by
reassuring them that their wealth, although soulless, is
pre-ordained. The "backs of the other" on which the colonizer
garners his wealth and power are no longer a necessary visual and
symbolic part of the imperial fiction. This signifies a cultural
difference between traditional manifestations of colonialism that
inculcate an entire nation into the project (because it is often
carried out in the name of nationalism) and transnational capitalism
(which is carried out by "private" corporations whose actions do not
openly draw in the U.S. consumer as an accomplice). Hollywood’s
suburban audience will not rise up against their tormentors because
the logic that fuels metropole/suburbia, center/margin, and the
unbalanced dialectic of globalization seemingly traps the Western
audience: at one moment rendering them a victim of their own
materialism and excess, at the same moment enticing them with the
spectacle of nice homes and cars, and all the while asking them to
ignore how the imbalance comes about. This narrative mechanism
indirectly addresses the asymmetry in global resources by offering
the possibility of "wealth among seemingly everyday American
characters" (Horn 48).
Aside from glorifying and then normalizing economic
prosperity, films like American Beauty downplay the scope of a
corporate logic aimed at profiting from local and global
exploitations. Paul Arthur explains that movies like Beauty, "rather
than attack[ing] the gospel according to Dow Jones, . . . summon the
shopworn ancillary proxies of suburban ennui, the success myth, and
heedless consumerism" (51). Clearly, Lester Burnham’s tragic
downfall is spurred on by his being fired from a cookie-cutter job
in a cookie-cutter office where he sells advertisements. But the
movie allows the audience to revel in Lester’s unlikely grip of
power over the company. He quits his job, explaining that he will no
longer be "a whore for the advertising industry. I’m just an
ordinary guy with nothin’ to lose." Of course he doesn’t lose
anything. He gets a year’s salary and the freedom to do whatever he
wants. Instead of allowing the narrative to illustrate a corporate
disregard for the average citizen in the name of higher profits,
Lester leaves the office as the victor, and the black-mailed company
becomes the victim. In turn, the film distinctly frames Lester’s
demise as the vicious cultural effect of a soulless suburbia, the
infidelity of his unstable wife, his homo-phobic/sexual Nazi
neighbor, and what Sam Mendes along with scriptwriter Allan Ball
(1999) jokingly term the "joint of destiny" outside of the Realtors’
convention.
American Beauty, unlike the reliance upon the
frontier myth in the post-WWII Western film, never turns its lens
away from the confines of suburbia. Certainly, it can be argued that
the film’s story revolves around several suburban families, and as
such, taking the viewer beyond suburbia would be insignificant to
the development of the story. But I don’t want to let the absence of
the world beyond suburbia slip away as somehow insignificant. Frantz
Fanon’s indictment of the imperial logic, Wretched of the Earth,
insists that "Europe is literally the creation of the Third World"
(102). Whether or not Manichean dualities surface in a particular
representation or product of the imperial center, the center cannot
be imagined distinct from its connections to, in the words of Aimé
Césaire, "forced labor, intimidation, pressure, the police,
taxation, theft, rape, compulsory crops, [and] contempt" (42) out of
which the imperial center is partly constituted. To dismiss the
nature of these interconnections when analyzing a cultural artifact
requires an aggressive de-contextualization of the narrative and a
disregard for the breadth of a particular discourse. I do not want
to imply that Beauty’s neglect of the world beyond the suburb
unproblematically mirrors the colonial context of which Fanon and
Césaire were writing. But such an absence, in the context of an
imbalanced global politic, is not innocent; it illustrates that our
contemporary fictions no longer take as their central task the need
to project "empty" lands in need of civilization and "dark
continents" waiting for enlightenment. This shift in cultural
imaginings implies two significant issues about the U.S. and
globalization at the turn of the millennium. First, there is no
longer a frontier.[8] Secondly, by downplaying the frontier myth and
turning the gaze away from those spaces beyond the suburb, the real
material relations informing globalcentrism are conveniently
silenced.
More specifically, American Beauty sublimates the
logic of those earlier imperial narratives and transcodes their
manicheisms onto contemporary contexts. In American Beauty, the
irrationality of the Other presents itself as an unstable wife who
drives around town with a 9mm on her passenger seat chanting the
mantra "I refuse to be a victim." The barbaric Other is re-cast as
an unhinged homophobic gay man, who beats his son and harbors quiet
Nazi sympathies. Against this backdrop, Lester appears the epitome
of Enlightened rationality. It is not by accident that the
subjective and narrative center of the film is white, middle-class,
heterosexual, and male: a narrative that mirrors, as one example,
the current international division of labor along racial and gender
polarities. Beauty substitutes the unconquered frontier with a
literal virgin/eve as the colonizer’s goal. In fact, the moral
problematic developed by the narrative revolves around Lester’s
fetish for the underage Angela. But here, too, our hero appears
innocent. The movie’s narrative has Angela trick Lester into
thinking she is sexually experienced; the film has Angela desire
Lester’s conquest in a sadistic reworking of Kipling’s "white man’s
burden." But Lester (in this instance, a dominant male on the verge
of committing statutory rape) nobly refuses to "take her" once he
knows she is a virgin. It paints the conqueror with a wash of
humanitarianism; as someone who refuses to continue his exploitation
because of his inherent altruism; a white man’s benevolence that
suburbia has suppressed. In a narrative shift that exonerates Lester
and the audience, we are reassured that he/we would never take
advantage of other people(s). At this moment in the film, the
audience is offered a dual innocence—Angela’s sexual innocence and
Lester’s ethical innocence—that overtly sidesteps the power
relationship that drives their obsession with each other. Lester’s
redemption is narratively manifest in a recognition of Angela’s
"innocence"; an innocence which is transferred, by what can only be
osmosis, to Lester: a man at peace with the world, staring at a
black-and-white photo of his family, reminiscing about a lost
history, completely unaware that almost everyone else intends to
kill him; a bullet in the head he never saw coming.
Just as Lester is redeemed by the contradictory
confluence of Enlightenment and innocence, so too is the U.S.
audience. If anti-imperialist, third cinema is characterized by an
esthetic of hunger and tropes of underdevelopment (Shohat & Stam,
1994), then normalizing the luxury of developed countries in
cinematic images is particular to the discourse of globalcentrism.
John Horn notes this trend.
[A] luxurious lifestyle is shaping the cinematic
aesthetic, creating in the current movie season an epidemic of
wealth among seemingly everyday American characters that has moved
from the vaguely annoying to the nearly pornographic. Only a
fraction of the 35- millimeter money is central to the movie plots .
. . . Filmmakers drown their characters in spectacular real estate,
designer clothes and swank cars, and still pretend that who we see
on screen are people next door. (48)
In the pre-war Hollywood musicals of Busby Berkeley,
the luxurious was never assumed to be the status quo of middle-class
America. The acknowledgment of these earlier films’ position as
fantasy partly provided depression-era Hollywood with its nickname
as the "dream machine." But the distinction remains that the
discourse of globalization must reassure the U.S. audience of the
common-place nature of their own relatively uncommon position in an
unbalanced global dialectic. American Beauty superficially
challenges this relative position of Western affluence: it is the
excess provided by suburbia that leaves Lester empty and "dead
already." At one point, he even announces his distaste for the
materialist culture to Carolyn: "This isn’t life. This is stuff. And
its become more important to you than living!"
But the film very neatly describes the world of
excessive wealth with a language of "ordinary"ness. Lester tells his
supervisor that he is just "an ordinary guy with nothin’ to lose."
The 16 year old Angela explains to Lester’s daughter (as they drive
around suburbia in a convertible BMW), that "If people I don’t even
know look at me and want to fuck me, I really have a shot at being a
model. Which is great. Because there’s nothing worse in life than
being ordinary." In fact, this becomes Angela’s mantra. Later in the
film, she remarks, "Ordinary . . . . I don’t think there’s anything
worse than being ordinary." And Ricky (Wes Bentley) knows how to
bring her down: "you’re ordinary, and you know it." Satisfying a
dual purpose in the discourse of globalization, American Beauty
pretends to critique a notion of the "ordinary" which it must first
invent—as Mercedes SUVs, BMWs, classic cars, white picket fences
lined with manicured roses, color-coordinated pruning gear, large
homes, and the luxury of working at McDonalds because you want, as
does Lester, "the least possible amount of responsibility." An
interesting statement in the context of McGlobalization.
Gladiator (2000)
The 2001 Academy Awards invoked images of
globalization from the first moment. Anthony Giddens’ claim that
globalization is marked by a "separation of time and space" (16) and
the ability to cross previously impermeable boundaries is right at
home in the Awards’ opening scenes of film, broadcast television,
and radio signals as they careen through outer-space at galactic
time. And while Giddens argues that globalization indicates the
"evaporating of the privileged position of the West" (52), I
couldn’t help but notice that all of the movie-clips floating
through the Academy’s televised solar system are Hollywood remnants.
The Awards then take us to a live feed from the International Space
Station, where, at over 18,000 miles per hour and more than 230
miles above the earth, the space station crew introduce host Steve
Martin (who wastes no time in telling the audience that the Awards
are being watched by over 800 million viewers world-wide).
The film this faux globally-minded Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences chose as the most esteemed cinematic
artifact from 2000 was Gladiator: directed by British-born Ridley
Scott, starring New Zealander Russell Crowe (as Maximus),
Denmark-born Connie Nielsen (as Lucilla), and filmed in a re-created
Rome on the island of Malta and in a computer. Of course, it’s owned
and distributed by Hollywood giants Dreamworks and Universal. I
think it’s interesting to place the narrative of Gladiator in the
context of its rival Best Picture nominees and ask ourselves what it
offers us as a cultural artifact the others do not. Ang Lee’s
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was, by some counts, expected to take
the Oscar. But to award the Oscar to a foreign film would certainly
risk exposing the Holly-centrism in the existence of a separate Best
Foreign Film category. Independent filmmaker Steven Soderbergh
brought two films to the Best Picture table: Traffic tackles
America’s War on Drugs by foregrounding the hypocrisies of those who
wage it; Erin Brokovich goes after the capitalist injustice of
profit over people, and follows Brokovich as she, according to the
tagline, brings "a huge corporation to its knees." Lastly is
Swedish-born Lasse Halström’s Chocolat, about a woman and daughter
who open a chocolate shop and shake up a rigidly moral community,
ultimately reminding audiences that tolerance is always better than
any form of intolerance. What does it say about a film industry
that, at the height of a decade of unrivaled economic prosperity,
bestows its greatest honor on a film which recreates the glory of
Imperial Rome and the struggles of an entertainment industry (the
gladiator system) unfairly driven by the whims of governments?
In a vein that parallels American Beauty, Scott’s
Gladiator adorns an underlying logic of imperialism with a cloak of
benevolence and humanitarianism. On the surface, Gladiator appears
anti-imperial, anti-cosmopolitan, and its narrative revolves around
a social contest for political democracy. But it never loses the
imperial subtext of barbaric other-ness, of lightness pit against
darkness, and of the grandiose, self-flattering spectacle that
defines empire. It has inherited these tropes from its earlier Roman
epic predecessors. In fact, most reviews of Gladiator position it in
terms of genre, invoking such sand-and-sandal greats as Mervin
LeRoy’s Quo Vadis? (1951), William Wyler’s Ben Hur (1959), Stanley
Kubrick’s Spartacus (1960), and Anthony Mann’s The Fall of the Roman
Empire (1964). Until halfway through the 1960s, the "ancient
historical/biblical/war spectacle represented one of the mainstays
of world cinema" (McCarthy 27).
The imperial epic has been dormant for over 35 years
(the political assassinations of the ‘60s and the Vietnam War
certainly created a problematic perception about the virtue of an
imperial project for Americans), and Gladiator can only surface and
triumph at this particular historical and political moment. One Time
review speculates that "there’s a magnetic pull of audiences to
Roman Empire epics—stories about palace sex, political backstabbing
and violent raids are as today as the Clinton administration" (83).
Such reviews are as diversionary as Monica-gate, and they leave by
the wayside any ideological analysis of the political and economic
expansionism that defines and informs the possibility of Empire.
Furthermore, surface critiques will seldom ask why such a narrative
thrives in America’s culture at this particular historical moment.
Nicholas Nicastro notes how the Roman epic alters slightly with each
movie-going generation.
In the heyday of the silent epics, all ancient
cities looked like Sodom and existed only to fall. At the dawn of
wide-screen films, Rome had the broad, uncluttered roadways and
suburban villas dreamt of by post-war bread-winners. By the early
sixties, Stanley Kubrick presented the definitive Cold War Rome . .
. . [But] partly because of moviegoer’s changing tastes and partly
because of production costs, nobody even attempted an ancient
spectacle on the scale of Anthony Mann’s 1964 The Fall of the Roman
Empire until Scott’s new film. (70)
What impresses Nicastro, an archaeologist, about
Gladiator is the film’s "respect for setting and subject" (70).
Giving due credit to the ability of computer-generated-imaging to
re-construct Rome before our eyes, the archaeologist also bemoans
how the film glamorizes "the army and the arena to the exclusion of
every other aspect of Roman life" (71). Nicastro wants Hollywood to
reanimate the baths, the law courts, the gardens, and the tombs. It
is culturally significant, however, that Scott reanimated the army
and arena while leaving the rest of Rome in imaginative ruin. A
Roman epic which fuses war and spectacle finds a safe home in a
post-CNN Gulf War generation whose own affluence and global might
are partly the result of a Cold War conquest.
Gladiator is the story of a Roman military general,
Maximus (Russell Crowe) who is asked by the dying Emperor, Marcus
Aurelius (Richard Harris) to become Rome’s new ruler in order to
gradually turn the Empire into a republic. Of course, the Emperor’s
son, Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix) not only believes that he, not
Maximus, should become Rome’s new ruler, but that the citizens need
a "father" in the form of a dictator. Commodus kills his father, has
Maximus’ family slaughtered, and, he believes, has Maximus
assassinated. However, Maximus is sold into slavery, becomes a
famous gladiator, and embarks upon a personal mission to fulfill
"the wish of a dying man." In a culturally important way, the movie
represents Maximus as anti-cosmopolitan at the same time it
narratively draws him into the contest between national/cultural
imperialism and freedom. From the beginning, Maximus longs to return
to the countryside. After the movie’s opening battle sequence, in
which Maximus successfully conquers and annexes Germania, a
celebration finds him discussing with several senators his desire to
return to his farm in Spain.
Quintus:
Back to the barracks, or to Rome?
Maximus:
Home. Wife. Son. The harvest.
Quintus:
Maximus the Farmer. I still have difficulty imagining that.
Maximus:
You know dirt cleans off a lot easier than blood, Quintus.
The wit of Maximus’ reply carries with it a real
sense of the oppressive conquest that walks with empire, and it also
codifies our central character and hero as non-cosmopolitan and
humanitarian. But the narrative quickly dismisses any discussion of
imperialism and empire by introducing the conflict facing Rome: will
Maximus, who has the army behind him, stand in favor of "Emperor or
Senate?" This contest attempts to introduce an anti-imperial tone in
a blatantly imperial setting. Whether a single, rogue dictator
should run a country or whether it should be run by the people
certainly resonates as a central cultural myth for a U.S. audience.
Maximus conveniently bows out of having to answer
such a question by insisting he return to Spain. And moments later,
the Emperor asks to speak privately with Maximus: he wants Maximus
to become Rome’s new ruler. Maximus resists, invoking images of his
rural, quiet life. The film’s narrative reassures the audience that
such a (local) concession to the (global) empire is a sacrifice in
the name of a greater freedom. Marcus, collapsing the distinction
between dictator and democracy, insists Maximus become Emperor and
"give power back to the people of Rome." The irony of giving the
most powerful military leader the autonomy of a dictator, and then
ask that he surrender (a difficult task for military leaders) that
same power didn’t make it past many critics. Kenneth Auchincloss
writes, "Did Marcus Aurelius intend to restore the republic? No.
However saintly (or tipsy), emperors didn’t do that sort of thing"
(71). Stuart Klawans cynically insists that the movie turns Maximus
into "a man on a white horse . . . who will restore Rome to
democracy by becoming a dictator" (34). Placing Gladiator in the
context of other summer blockbusters like Mission: Impossible 2 and
Titan A.E., it becomes apparent that many Hollywood films
rearticulate a similar cultural narrative.
Each of the films mentioned offers a simplistic
variation on the Jesus story. But they concern saviors who come with
weapons to redeem the world from dictatorial oppressors . . . . Yet
none of these narratives of revolution convincingly installs a more
egalitarian society after toppling its tyrant. The meek never
inherit the earth . . . . In universes where the sole challenge to a
sneering despot comes from slightly more enlightened fascists, blood
is bound to spill. (Shargel 39)
A new imperial humanitarianism is marked precisely
by a hollow critique of Empire, wherein peace and freedom are
represented as the natural result of conquest. The introductory
titles of Gladiator frame the narrative in just such a
contradiction: the battle against Germania ends with "a Roman
victory and the promise of peace throughout the Empire." These
titles are immediately followed by a stunning visual sequence that
reinforces this myth. We see a close-up of a hand brushing across
the wheat in a field. There is brown-golden tint to the image that
helps establish a sense of calm and warmth. The wheat is ready for
harvest, and this invokes a sense of sustenance and life. The image
cuts to a medium close-up of Maximus, who is still and solemn
against a vague background. And then we find ourselves in the cold,
dark Germania battlefield—burnt and leveled to a wasteland. Sergei
Eisenstein holds that the "nerve of cinema" (140) is in contrasting
images, and the "degree of incongruence determines intensity of
impression" (141). This model is useful for understanding the
emotive force that evolves from juxtaposing the wheat field with a
burnt forest: a contrast of light and dark, a contrast of warm and
cold, a contrast of life and death, a contrast of freedom and
domination; all cradled within a one-minute shot sequence.
Although this shot sequence is visually stunning, I
am particularly interested in the ideological implications of such
contrasts, noting how Eisenstein believes meaning arises "from the
collision of independent shots—shots even opposite to one another"
(141). Gladiator’s introductory sequence creates a narrative in
which peace and conquest are organically bound together, and the
fine line (literally, visually in this case) between prosperity and
desolation is occupied by a military leader on the verge of
victorious conquest. Even before this sequence, the titles inform
the audience that peace throughout the empire can only be attained
after conquering the "barbarian tribes" of Germania. And while Rome
is the aggressor, attempting to annex Germania to the northern
borders of its empire, "barbarian" helps to codify the Other as the
assailant. Visually, the battle-scene between the Roman army and the
Germanian barbarians emulates the trendy stylistic fast-cuts and
washed-out color that Spielberg popularized in the introductory
battle scene in his 1998 blockbuster Saving Private Ryan (a style
Klawans has appropriately coined "slo-mo, strobe-mo, and jitter-mo"
(34)). But the invocation of Germania ties the two films
ideologically as well; one cannot easily justify military conquest
in the name of Empire by invoking Vietnamia for the U.S. audience.
Later, when Maximus is captured by slave-traders, he
is taken to a barren outpost on the margins of the Empire. We never
get such barren landscapes inside of the Empire. Zucchabar is the
"Hollywood version of the Middle East: a place of mud-brick
architecture and ululation, where stoop-shouldered, burnoose-clad
merchants pass the days in sibilant larceny" (Klawans 34). It is not
ironic that in Scott’s Middle East, and not in Rome itself, our hero
is first enslaved and forced to brutally fight his comrades to the
death. It is either self-fulfilling prophecy or imperial logic that
Maximus, just twenty minutes earlier, was telling Marcus "I have
seen much of the rest of the world; it is brutal and cruel and dark.
Rome is the light." But the most stunning visual juxtapositions of
the darkness of barbarism and the light of civilization come when
the gladiators ready themselves, chained in the darkness beneath the
grandiosity of the Colosseum, and emerge into its light, the light
of Rome, of violence-as-spectacle, of war-as-simulacra (Carthage or
Kuwait?), and of conquest for profit; all masquerading as a contest
for democracy.
While Gladiator seldom deviates from the imperial
tropes and genre conventions that inform its earlier predecessors,
it differentiates itself by leaving out "the Judeo-Christian angle
so common to the genre in the 50's" (McCarthy 27). While this
certainly will not stand out to a new generation of moviegoers who
have no historical context of Gladiator’s genre, the shift indicates
a political transition which is crucial to a new image of imperial
humanitarianism. Nicastro asks, "If Gladiator is a modern parable,
what are we to make of the conspicuous absence of Christianity in
the film" (71)? While several critics (Klawans, 2000; McCArthy,
2000; Nicastro, 2000) place Gladiator in a historical context of
genre and notice this absence, Nicastro is the only one to wager a
possible reason: Romans no longer need to "turn into Christians"
(71) in order to remain interesting to an American audience. On the
surface, this lack indicates a shift in the moral center of American
culture. But there is an imperial political function in just such an
absence: it reaffirms the logic of Empire.
A brief comparison to one of Gladiator’s
predecessors elaborates this idea. Kubrick’s Spartacus (1960)
follows a loosely similar plot. Spartacus (Kirk Douglas) is a slave
who is sold to become a gladiator, revolts against his owner, and
leads his fellow slaves into rebellion. Spartacus’ revolt, as in
Gladiator, will have an impact on Rome, where two senators (one a
republican, the other a militarist) are engaged in a contest about
the political future of Rome. Unlike Gladiator, Kubrick’s film
invokes Christianity in its very first moment. The opening scene is
an overhead shot of a Roman centurion who stands guard over a rocky
expanse of mountain barrenness, where lines of slaves mine the rock
under a grueling sun in order to provide the materials for Rome’s
great architecture. The story of Spartacus is ideologically coded
and framed by the voice-over of a narrator.
In the last century before the birth of the new
faith called Christianity, which was destined to overthrow the pagan
tyranny of Rome and bring about a new society, the Roman republic
stood at the very center of the civilized world. "Of all things
fairest," sang the poet, "first among cities and home among Gods is
Rome." And even at the zenith of her pride and power, the republic
lay fatally stricken with a disease called human slavery.
Two things warrant our attention in the comparison.
Spartacus locates slavery at the very heart of the Roman empire;
indeed, slavery is one of the conditions of possibility of Empire.
In Scott’s film, slavery is banished to the margins of the empire,
and flourishes in a barbaric Middle East. It comes to Rome in the
form of gladiatorial contests and only when the tyrannical despot
Commodus gains power. Second, in Spartacus and the other Roman epics
up until the mid ‘60s, Christianity was invoked as the humanitarian
successor to "the pagan tyranny of Rome." Why then, in Hollywood’s
modern revival of the Roman epic, is Christianity not waiting in the
wings to enter and save Rome from its gluttony? Simple. At the
height of America’s longest stretch of political, economic, and
global prosperity and influence, why slander the idea of Empire?
Gladiator reaffirms for the American audience that
Empire is not inherently, structurally bad. It does not necessarily
need to fall. In fact, the film’s visual glorification of the Roman
empire and the Colosseum, with the aid of CGI, is a spectacled
amalgamation and fulfillment of both Triumph of the Will (1934) and
Olympia (1938) of which Leni Riefenstahl could only have imagined.
Such images idealize economic and political prosperity. Even Maximus’
desire to return to his estate in Spain (I know he insists it’s a
"farm," but only the aristocratic few could own land during the
Roman empire), which he solemnly describes to Marcus as "simple,
really," is filmed as an idyllic memory comprised of a Mediterranean
country home with "pink stone," a "kitchen garden," "herbs," a
white, picket "gate," "apples" growing in the orchard, "grapes" on
one side of the house, "olive trees" on the other, and "wild ponies"
running about. Where Riefenstahl will envy Scott’s reanimation of
Rome, Martha Stewart can but envy his invocation of the blatantly
affluent "simple life."
Conclusion
If the genre of the Western and its popularity
during post-World War II U.S. expansionism is contextually
pre-imperial (with vast, uncluttered landscapes that stand ready for
human civilization and U.S. expansionism), then the naturalized
images of prosperity in a film like American Beauty and the
grandiosity of the Roman landscape in Gladiator illustrate the
Western’s fulfillment. These films carry a surface message offering
a soft, or faux critique of imperialism. Yet in the same moment,
their narratives and spectacle offer up and reaffirm the United
States’s contemporary location as economic, political, and cultural
victors on the global stage. This contradiction is the perfect
coherency of an imperialism masquerading as humanitarianism.
I want to clarify several substantial theoretical
implications that this project begins to address concerning the
discourse of globalization and the dominant film industry’s
situating of the U.S. audience within this discourse. The latter
element of this focus deviates significantly from more traditional
approaches to theorizing globalization and culture (Appadurai, 1996;
Bhabha, 1994; Liebes and Katz, 1993) that train their eye on the
ways in which non-Western, local cultures negotiate the forces and
flows of Western culture (its artifacts, practices, ideologies) and
their own lived experience.
I am interested in the image of globalization that
is distributed to the U.S. audience, and whether this image is
indicative of an imperial globalization process favoring connections
of access or globalization as mutual interdependency and economic
and cultural parity. These movies indirectly address the issue of
globalization by employing its underlying logics in the construction
of their narratives. If we are to accept Herbert Schiller’s analysis
that, although international cultural flows are undergoing
transformation, "American cultural domination remains forceful in a
rapidly changing international power scene" (327), then
understanding how the powerful U.S. audience consents to this
Imperial form of globalization is indeed significant. In the context
of culture, Peter Berger understands globalization as a process of
challenges and responses: "The challenge is supposed to come from an
emerging global culture, most of it Western and indeed American
provenance," while the response from the local cultures is "on a
scale between acceptance and rejection" (2). In the realm of
economics, George Sorros sees globalization as "the development of
global financial markets, the growth of transnational corporations,
and their increasing domination over national economies" (1), a
process resulting from the elected Reagan and Thatcher governments
who actively sought to reduce state interference with the flow of
capital. If both the cultural and economic shape of globalization is
now influenced unequally by the West and the United States, then the
circulation of the dominant discourse on globalization within and
targeting the U.S. audience will not ignore this fact. Instead, it
will overtly or indirectly address the inequality of the process in
its cultural images, narratives, and practices. Whether these
condemn or condone the emerging global imbalance is text/practice
specific. What each cultural articulation cannot do is outright
remove itself from within the broader discourse of globalization.
This is certainly not to imply that either the
discourse or process of globalization is totalizing or homogenous.
Appadurai notes, "the globalization of culture is not the same as
its homogenization" and that "lives today are as much acts of
projection and imagination as they are enactments of known scripts
and predictable outcomes" (42, 61). But when we recognize that the
major vehicles for images of culture and ideology are the global
media (of which, I noted earlier, U.S. film and the U.S. audience
remain the site of the largest revenues), one must come to terms
with the fact that, for the time being, the first site of cultural
negotiation with an imperial-style discourse of globalization is
enacted in the movie gigaplexes and homes of the U.S. audience. In
the context of globalization, this media moment embodies a
coming-to-terms with the "unbalanced dialectic" (to re-invoke
Tomlinson’s phrase) between the U.S. audience (its armaments,
economic interests, cultural products, and language hegemonies) and
the rest of the world. American Beauty, Gladiator, and most widely
circulated Hollywood blockbusters (from Cast Away (2000) to Black
Hawk Down (2001)) offer an articulation of the imperial tendency in
the current process of globalization. Gramsci’s understanding of
hegemony works well, I think, in describing the American audience’s
acceptance of the assymetrical exchange and consumption of global
resources, and the quantitative imbalance of global media, news,
information, entertainment, and economic and cultural flows. The
idea of hegemony resists homogeneity in favor of a plurality of
cultural negotiations. But it also helps to illustrate the ways in
which the global media industry invites the U.S. audience (through
images that reaffirm affluence, the might of conquest, and the right
to Empire) to consent to the residual logic of imperialism in the
current processes of globalization.
It is important to recognize that traditional
European discourses of Empire, the classic analysis of which is
Edward Said’s Orientalism (1979), regularly cloaked the barbarity of
the colonial enterprise (exploitation, slavery, expansion) in
symbols of benevolence (education, civilization, salvation).
American Beauty and Gladiator mark a striking deviation from this
history of representation. That is, unlike the earlier imperial
discourses which rely on the cultural construction of a uncivilized,
barbaric Other, these current films are part of a discourse which is
even more "Self-centric." They do not invoke the specter of an
exotic, non-Western Other which necessarily needs the European (and
intervention) to be made whole. In both American Beauty and
Gladiator, the critique of the soul-less, barbaric, un-democratic,
un-civilized emptiness of geography and mind is turned upon the
imperial Self. It is our own suburban wasteland (in Beauty) and
un-civilized barbarism (in Gladiator) that requires humanitarian
intervention. These are criticisms often directed at the current
model of globalization. Yet, the solution each movie offers to these
deficiencies is the same as it was in the traditional colonial
discourse: self-gratification and excess (in Beauty) and the
inherent glory of an expansionist Empire (in Gladiator). Instead of
invoking the disfunction of the Other in an attempt to justify
Empire, these two movies mark a trend which invokes the disfunction
of Empire’s own logic in order to ultimately restore the necessity
of those same logics. That is, these movies are a site of cultural
negotiation, but the contest of what should be America’s position in
the context of globalization is first enacted, worked through, and
neutralized on the screen.
It is important, I think, to resist reading the
Academy Award winners as artistic and scientific achievements (which
is the claim of the Academy) existing outside of a global
interconnectedness. Such a tendency results in weak critical
interrogations of the films, defining them as "artfully and
exuberantly constructed escapism" (Travers 82). Michael Ryan and
Douglas Kellner offer a more productive approach to thinking about
the pedagogical role of film.
The representation of the social world is political
and [the] choice of modes of representation instantiates differing
political positions toward it. Indeed, every camera position, every
scene composition, every editing decision, and every narrative
choice involves a representational strategy that embeds various
interests and desires. (274)
It is from this critical angle that we can see the
supportive role that Hollywood works like Gladiator and American
Beauty play in ratifying an unbalanced global dialectic: a dialectic
that normalizes affluence at the same time encouraging a type of
"imaginative poverty" concerning America’s global influence; a
dialectic that finds Kenneth Cole’s version of the Roman sandal worn
by Lucilla in a movie about freedom-over-oppression suddenly out of
stock. American Beauty and Gladiator offer a reading of America’s
location in the world, and it is no small matter that they are
awarded Hollywood’s highest honor. These works are vehicles of
culture, and for an economically prosperous industry and audience
they are vehicles of affluence, operating to either marginalize or
normalize the global political and economic asymmetry marking this
historical moment.
Notes
[1]. In the case of American Beauty, it grossed more
in the U.S. during the one week following it’s success at the
Academy Awards (approximately 116.658 million) than it did during
the entire first month (and more) of its theatrical run. It went
from playing on only 7 screens nation-wide during the middle of
February 2000 to playing on an astonishing 1990 screens the weekend
after its Best Picture win at the Academy Awards in March 2000.
Gladiator follows a similar trend, playing on only 12 screens the
weekend before its Best Picture win in March 2001 to 577 screens the
weekend following its Academy success.
[2]. One need only look at the National Geographic
magazine (December 2001) map of world-wide teledensity and
fiber-optic submarine cable "Connecting the Planet" to note this
influence. Color coding (red=highest teledensity and white=least
teledensity) leaves the U.S. looking like a blood-red heart with
fiber-optic vessels leading out from it (or coming into it) to/from
the entire globe (77-78).
[3]. Tomlinson’s analysis of Mark Phillip’s BBC
documentary Mange Tout (1997) deals specifically with how
differently globalization constructs the consumer and producer of a
commodity. "One of the revealing aspects of this film was the
relative levels of information about, or ignorance of, the other
displayed by the producers and consumers" (136). Tomlinson draws out
not only the non-reciprocal undercurrent of globalization, but the
"imaginative poverty" (136) of the general population who operate as
beneficiaries within a global network.
[4]. This message is the centerpiece of NewsCorp’s
homepage. See www.newscorp.com (accessed 19 February 2000). The full
heading reads: "Producing and distributing the most compelling news,
information, and entertainment to the farthest reaches of the
Globe." For the time being at least, the critical scholar can find
some reassurance in NewsCorp’s admission that news, information, and
entertainment remain separate entities.
[5]. Ella Shohat and Robert Stam find a similar
relationship between the economics of imperialism and the
proliferation of cinema as a cultural past-time. They write, "The
most prolific film-producing countries of the silent period—Britain,
France, the U.S., Germany—also ‘happened’ to be among the leading
imperialist countries, in whose clear interest it was to laud the
colonial enterprise" (100). The importance of the imperial project,
they suggest, became disseminated to the broader public precisely
through the popular fictions of the cinema.
[6]. Here I am referring to Shohat and Stam’s
Unthinking Eurocentrism, which is an extremely important, thorough
historical analysis of Imperial narratives and tropes in popular
Hollywood cinema. While I am indebted to the ideas forwarded in
their text, it is important, I think, to now apply the methodology
of their project to films which do not fall within the traditional
boundaries of Imperial fictions (i.e. westerns, narratives of
discovery, conquest films, etc.).
[7]. The U.S. audience is the first consumer of the
global media conglomerates ideology of globalization. NewsCorp’s
interest in becoming a global distributor of news and entertainment
must be weighed against the overwhelming consumption of NewsCorp’s
products by the U.S.. According to their 2000 Financial Report, the
American audience accounts for nearly 75% of all of NewsCorp’s
yearly revenue. Disney’s goal in 1995 to "expand it’s non-US share
of revenues from 23 percent in 1995 to 50 percent by 2000" (Herman
and McChesney, 81) never materialized. Their 2000 fiscal report
still posits 82% of their revenue in the United States.
[8]. More precisely, the frontier has escaped this
world and is now embodied as a galactic frontier. And this new
frontier is also imagined as needing colonization and control, as
exampled by the continued success of the Star Trek and Star Wars
series, and movies like Armageddon (1998), Deep Impact (1998), and
Mission to Mars (1999), the latter films imagining space as a threat
because it’s outside American control.
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About the Author
Brian White, Ph.D., is Visiting Assistant Professor
at the University of North Dakota, where he is currently teaching
courses on popular culture, film/media, and international
communication for the University's Honors Program and the School of
Communication. His articles on the discourse of terrorism,
imperialism and culture have appeared in Post-Identity and Dis-Closure:
the Journal of Social Theory. Correspondence regarding the article
should be directed to
brian.white@und.edu.