I can't help but wonder
Oct. 30th, 2002 05:43 pmLast Edited: 5:51 10/30
I saw an odd movie last night that I didn't mention. I only saw the first 30 minutes or so. The synopsis of the film was due to the Chinese setting off nuclear bombs underground, the pacific plate was shifting and cracks were opening in the ocean floor, letting magma (or at least thermal energy) esape, compounding the greenhouse effect. Oh, and earthquakes and wildfires were happening the world over. And the only way to stop this from occuring was to create a force of the same magnitude from the opposite direction.. by nuking Los Angeles.
After an earthquake happened in a tunnel in Los Angeles, causing a gas main to break and an enormous explosion to occur in the tunnel, killing everyone but a 14 year old girl thrown in the trunk by her mom, I turned it off.
But it got me thinking.
We (I'm not sure if "We" are Americans or everyone) are obsessed with doomsday scenarios.
What if Aliens came out of space using mind-bogglingly powerful heat rays to destroy the world. (*cough* ID4 *cough*)
What if a HUUUGE Asteroid was heading for a collision course with Earth?
Or... what if Nazi Terrorists implanted a small tactical nuke in a cigarette machine and set it to go off at the Superbowl
What is an unknown disease wipes out 99.99% of the people on Earth?
And this is just in popular media.
Heck, the media takes a backseat to real life. At least in popular media, there's a hero (or heroes) who somehow save the day.
Just look at real life, though, we have our own set of real life doomsday scenarios, some a little closer to home than others.
What if terrorists start doing in the US what they do in Israel (or Russia), strapping bombs to their chests and heading to our theaters and malls and pizza parlors?
What if Al Qaeda does hit again, more spectacular and more terrible than before?
What if Iraq, fed up with our shit, dropped one of their biological or chemical weapons on us? Or Israel?
What if, out of nowhere, I was shot and killed tommorow by an idiot with a grudge?
What if all the future holds for us is a long drawn out battle drawn on religious lines that will inevitably draw in nearly every nation in the world?
Sometimes I think we just like the struggle. We like watching people struggle against odds stacked far above our own because it puts our own pathetic lives in perspective and as our own lives get more violent, more terrible, the odds our heroes will have to go through even more and more violent scenarios.
With the way real life is going, I think you'll find the heroes of tommorow will have to brave the pits of hell over and over again to keep ratings going.
I guess we'll just see.
Until then, let's all just play our happy little doomsday "what if" games.
I saw an odd movie last night that I didn't mention. I only saw the first 30 minutes or so. The synopsis of the film was due to the Chinese setting off nuclear bombs underground, the pacific plate was shifting and cracks were opening in the ocean floor, letting magma (or at least thermal energy) esape, compounding the greenhouse effect. Oh, and earthquakes and wildfires were happening the world over. And the only way to stop this from occuring was to create a force of the same magnitude from the opposite direction.. by nuking Los Angeles.
After an earthquake happened in a tunnel in Los Angeles, causing a gas main to break and an enormous explosion to occur in the tunnel, killing everyone but a 14 year old girl thrown in the trunk by her mom, I turned it off.
But it got me thinking.
We (I'm not sure if "We" are Americans or everyone) are obsessed with doomsday scenarios.
What if Aliens came out of space using mind-bogglingly powerful heat rays to destroy the world. (*cough* ID4 *cough*)
What if a HUUUGE Asteroid was heading for a collision course with Earth?
Or... what if Nazi Terrorists implanted a small tactical nuke in a cigarette machine and set it to go off at the Superbowl
What is an unknown disease wipes out 99.99% of the people on Earth?
And this is just in popular media.
Heck, the media takes a backseat to real life. At least in popular media, there's a hero (or heroes) who somehow save the day.
Just look at real life, though, we have our own set of real life doomsday scenarios, some a little closer to home than others.
What if terrorists start doing in the US what they do in Israel (or Russia), strapping bombs to their chests and heading to our theaters and malls and pizza parlors?
What if Al Qaeda does hit again, more spectacular and more terrible than before?
What if Iraq, fed up with our shit, dropped one of their biological or chemical weapons on us? Or Israel?
What if, out of nowhere, I was shot and killed tommorow by an idiot with a grudge?
What if all the future holds for us is a long drawn out battle drawn on religious lines that will inevitably draw in nearly every nation in the world?
Sometimes I think we just like the struggle. We like watching people struggle against odds stacked far above our own because it puts our own pathetic lives in perspective and as our own lives get more violent, more terrible, the odds our heroes will have to go through even more and more violent scenarios.
With the way real life is going, I think you'll find the heroes of tommorow will have to brave the pits of hell over and over again to keep ratings going.
I guess we'll just see.
Until then, let's all just play our happy little doomsday "what if" games.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 02:51 pm (UTC)I'm sorry to make it look like I don't care about the rest, but this one's bugging me. What movie was that?
As to the rest, well. I don't know why people are so obsessed with apocalyptic scenarios. I'll admit that I enjoy them as well, I think they make for a good story with an interesting plot, much of the time, and try not to think that things could happen that way. It's just... I dunno, interesting to speculate on.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 02:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 02:54 pm (UTC)I do believe the world will end like it says in Revelations. I don't know if we are in that period right now (my view is that, no, we are not experiencing the Tribulation now), but it will occur. This could all be a setup to those events. I don't know.
End-times always makes my head hurt.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 02:57 pm (UTC)I don't believe in Revelations, per se, but I can easily believe in a million doomsday scenarios, all of our making.
A real pivotal one for me at the moment is.. what if we don't smarten up in time and end up in World War III with a whole set of Muslim nations? Because I honestly believe that's where we are heading.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 02:58 pm (UTC)That's supposed to be why NOW? not why NOT?
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 03:05 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 03:47 pm (UTC)In my New Testament class we talked alot about apocalyptic Jewish sects right existing right around the time of Jesus's ministry. There is some speculation from the letters that Paul wrote (which compose of alot of the New Testament) that he very much thought that the parousia (the "day of the Lord") was in the immediate future. Like he would be alive to see it.
I think that every age likes to see themselves as the sum of all human achievement, the final thought. The most encompassing idea, thus the world is ready to end.
As far as the media focusing on those ideas; you could easily point at media's focus of love or of horror or of lots of other things. Media does the best to pull at the emotions of people, to provide something other than just a bunch of images flashing on the screen.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 03:52 pm (UTC)Hell, early Christians believed that this was it - the Messiah had come and been crucified, and he'd come again in a short time and then the world would end. Now here we are, ~1970 years later, and he ain't returned yet. "Gee," says popular thought, "Maybe it's about time now. Maybe it's time for a reckoning."
This kind of thought has persisted for a long long time, and it's going to continue to persist.
And we can also look at this without any kind of religious or political commentary. How about looking at it fiscally?
Movies sell.
Movies with heroes sell well.
Movies with disasters sell well.
Movies with heroes who fight to save people from disasters sell better.
Now... what's the biggest disaster we can make a movie about?
This is why we'll continue to see the Hammer fall for a long long time.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 06:44 pm (UTC)But I agree with you, for the most part, on everything else. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 07:54 pm (UTC)Had I seen it already there, my reply would have been different.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 08:34 pm (UTC)Curiously, the original book isn't sold in stores anymore. The book in stores now is based on the movie. You can't find the original anywhere.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-30 10:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-31 04:01 am (UTC)