Technical filmmaking and scientific narratives: Has science overtaken fiction in recent science fiction? An analysis of <em>Gravity</em>, <em>Interstellar</em>, and <em>The Martian</em>

Article

Technical filmmaking and scientific narratives: Has science overtaken fiction in recent science fiction? An analysis of Gravity, Interstellar, and The Martian

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 37 , issue 1 , 2018 , pages: 53–65
DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2017.1423441
Author(s): Justin Sands School for Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

One can view the recent science fiction films Gravity, Interstellar, and The Martian as a three-part dialogue concerning the existential relationship between humanity, technology, and the science employed to create said technologies. Pitched into the deep of space, each film’s protagonist must seek to find technological answers to save their own existence. Each film’s exploration of these themes essentially questions the importance of technology as a product of scientific-calculative thinking and the validity of this thinking as the primary mode of understanding the world. In this article, I explore the existential dialogue crafted between these films through Walter Benjamin and Martin Heidegger. Through Benjamin, we will see how the medium of film is completely dependent upon technology to present its art and how this transforms the stories it tells, while also transforming the audience and the audience’s reality. Consequently, understanding the popular reception of these films becomes just as important as the films themselves for our present study. Through Heidegger, we will see how technology provides a space where we can find a truth about ourselves and our reality. However, modern technology’s increasing scientific complexity, created by scientists who in turn employ modern technology to further science, also conceals just as much as it reveals. These films provide us with an opportunity to explore a truth about our dependence upon technology even though, as technologically dependent works of art, they may also conceal how dependent upon science we have become when constructing our reality.

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