Purplefluffychainsaw wrote:
ouinon wrote:
Disasters are not only unpredictable, but they are UNpredictED. I knew there was something fundamentally fishy about "the global warming disaster"/"catastrophic climate change" as concepts!!
Wouldn't this count the Day After Tomorrow out then?
Well, it would account for the faint (?!) air of spuriousness, which Emmerich is often guilty of!
The hasty presentation of the hero-scientist's theories at the conference at the beginning of the film serve to create a moral, and a perfunctory "baddie"/scapegoat as opponent to argue with/boo, but in fact the predictions would not have justified any activity on govt's part because the disaster arrives immediately! . ( Just remembered; the scientist does not in fact call for mitigation/reduction of CO2 emissions, but for mass evacuations
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Also, what does anyone think of any of the 9/11 films that've come out recently? I haven't seen any of them, but surely they count?
When I first saw/heard the media coverage of 9/11 I kept thinking; it's like Die Hard, The Towering Inferno, etc. To me the films of 9/11 as a disaster had already been done. Now they are historical/documentary, and the story is of a crime/act of war/tragedy, not a disaster.
I was thinking about how the Holocaust has been very difficult for film/art to treat, and am wondering whether it may be partly due to this issue, that it can't be presented as a "disaster" because it WAS announced, ( by several people, in several countries, as it was beginning, as it was happening), and no one made much of a move to stop it; disbelief being part of that, but also worse motivations.
Has a film ever been made in fact about the efforts to alert the authorities outside germany and failing, (other than "Amen", which examined the part played by the Pope/Catholic Church's role in such denial)?
Does any one have any other examples of disaster films, or arguments about the ones listed/treated so far?
I'm sure i've forgotten a whole lot of them somewhere.