|
But the theme is most obvious in "Fringe," the alternate-universe science fiction show that Abrams co-created. The central kernel of "Fringe" (a gateway is created to a parallel universe that becomes environmentally calamitous) mirrors, precisely, the message of so many of those 1950s sci-fi flicks: the notion that there are some things in which man was not meant to meddle. The tech angst of "Super 8," while more subtle, holds more direct relevance to our lives today. Because, aside from the fictional central interloper, the makers of "Super 8" got 1979 exactly right and true. The budding filmmaker, the little pyro whose backpack is filled with fireworks of various varieties, the clerk with the Walkman, the teenage stoner who insists that "No one touches my CB"
-- they are all the children who grew up to build the tech-focused society that now envelops us. Today they are the reality-show producer, the weapons designer, the music-app code writer and the middle-age suburban guy who doesn't let his kids use the remote on his new 64-inch, flat-screen TV. In "Super 8," Abrams takes the Age of Information
-- our age -- and spins back to its roots, to the space-shuttle posters and Mattel Electronic Football devices that formed its foundations in the minds of 1979's children. In short, the A/V geeks grew up to rule the world, and hey -- we citizens of the attention-deficit Era of Many Screens better take a long, hard look at whether that was a good thing. "I need you to make Alice a zombie," says the movie's budding filmmaker to his makeup artist. Well, no need: Three decades on, we've done it to ourselves. Joe Lamb (Joel Courtney), the adolescent protagonist, is the exception: the sensitive kid who realizes that amid all of this gadgetry and mechanization, sometimes just being human
-- being genuinely nice -- is the answer. He is America unplugged, and if "Super 8" is any indication, Abrams believes that there's still great value to that, even today: A fan boy doesn't need gadgets to prevail. That probably should have been obvious from the first moment of "Super 8," when the logo of Abrams' production company appears. Remember it? "Bad Robot."
[Associated
Press;
Ted Anthony writes about American culture for The Associated Press.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor