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MCP 7 (3) pp. 349–356 Intellect Limited 2011
International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics
Volume 7 Number 3
© 2011 Intellect Ltd Commentaries. English language. doi: 10.1386/macp.7.3.349_3
COMMENTARIES
DESPINA KAKOUDAKI
American University
Representing politics in
disaster films
Since its resurgence in the 1990s, the disaster film genre oscillates between the
demands of two competing desires, the desire for realism and cultural relevance,
and the desire for fantasy and spectacle. The premise of the genre, its narrative
dependence on threats, attacks or natural disasters, can be adapted and used
to interrogate the meaning of political institutions, but can also occasion purely
spectacular narratives that traffic in paranoid nightmares of threat as well as
utopian fantasies of patriotic unification. From the shaky camera work and myste-
rious alien of Cloverfield (Matt Reeves, 2008) to the dramatic intensity and realis-
tic threats of Contagion (Steven Soderbergh, 2011), and the references to current
biotechnology research in Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Rupert Wyatt, 2011),
disaster films operate in a hybrid representational space that combines realistic
fears and conditions with their imaginary and exaggerated counterparts.
But even when the premise of a disaster film is outrageous or far-fetched,
there is important political content in the representational gestures of the
genre. Despite the formulaic tendencies of disaster films, their fantasmatic
depictions of trauma retain political and emotional connections with historical
events and real-world catastrophes (Dixon 2003). In what follows, I outline
the ways in which political realities shape the genre’s fantasies, drawing from
three films that span the latest waves of disaster movies: Roland Emmerich’s
Independence Day (1996), The Day After Tomorrow (2004) and 2012 (2009).