A future all too present
The fear is now, writes Lorraine Ali. How Fahrenheit 451 measures up against TV’s most recent dystopian dramas.
DEMOCRACY has been replaced by authoritarian rule. All books, music and art deemed ‘‘inappropriate’’ are banned. Citizens are controlled by computers and/or robots. Free will is a thing of the past.
The best scifi and dystopian fantasies articulate the fears of a grim, future America that’s terrifyingly close to the one we live with now, but far enough away to let our anxieties unfurl in the safety of an imaginary world.
Now that those frightening prophecies seem to be creeping closer, or perhaps it’s home that’s gradually slid in dystopia’s direction, television has responded with enough shows about the dark future to make professional conspiracy theorists like Alex Jones look like rank amateurs.
The disturbing worlds portrayed in
The Handmaid’s Tale, Mr. Robot and Westworld aren’t all that farfetched given that ‘‘deep state’’, ‘‘private data mining’’ and ‘‘bots’’ are terms that now pepper conversations.
The latest such drama to plumb the depths of posteverything paranoia is HBO’s adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s 1953 scifi classic
Fahrenheit 451. The film, which premieres tomorrow, is set in a future America shaped by many of the same events that underpin Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel on which The Handmaid’s Tale series is based. Following a second civil war, Americans have been stripped of most of their rights. Books, films, paintings and other forms of individualist human expression are forbidden, and Canada is the final destination on the road to freedom.
The fire department is a militarised force that burns ‘‘graffiti’’, which means everything from J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye and
Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On to
Mozart sheet music. Only statesanctioned information (aka propaganda) is available, and it’s piped through one centralised internet feed called the Nine. Siri’s evil twin in this parallel universe is Yuxie. She’s with you all the time to ensure you’ll never look anywhere else for information again.
Mollifying drugs are dispensed daily, there are cameras in every home, and public space and slogans such as the familiar ‘‘If you see something, say something’’ are projected 24/7 on the sides of skyscrapers. Michael B. Jordan plays Guy Montag, a librarytorching fireman until he switches sides and joins the resistance. Michael Shannon plays his superior and mentor, Captain Beatty.
Jordan, who channelled an impressive mix of fury, narcissism and dejection as Black Panther
villain Erik Killmonger, is less memorable as the suddenly woken Montag. He’s good, but who can compete with a bad guy in a cat suit? Instead, it’s Shannon who’s stellar as the cruel, conflicted and hypocritical Beatty.
Fahrenheit 451’s main problem stems from the fact that it jams a series’ worth of story into 100 minutes. It could have used more space and time to unpack discussions about free will and all that other stuff you didn’t learn in philosophy 101 but could really use now.
The film does succeed in taking on issues we face today — technology overload, too much information, tribal divisions, lack of privacy — and stretching them to the extreme. The totalitarian future it depicts, one that would have surely seemed fantastical back when the book was published, is all too plausible today: a culturally illiterate America, hooked on screens, moodaltering pharmaceuticals and emojis as a prime form of selfexpression. Says one of the rebels who’s fighting against the surveillance state to preserve literature, ‘‘The ministry didn’t do this to us. We did it to ourselves. We wanted a world like this.’’
No, we didn’t!
Thankfully, we can still vent our outrage on Facebook, in a post that never goes away, accompanied by a locationtagged selfie, alongside personal information, family photos, political rants, dating status — all of which we volunteered. And unlike the citizens in Fahrenheit 451, we still have our books — in print and on our phones.
When Montag discovers a dusty paperback of Dostoevsky’s Notes
From Underground, he’s astounded to find such advanced thought in such primitive form. As readers of the classic Bradbury story already know, however, the medium, it turns out, is not the message.
The Handmaid’s Tale is the best of all the ‘‘ohmygodthiscouldtotallyhappen’’ dystopian programming out there. It imagines the aftermath of another kind of second American civil war, where a theocracy rules and all remnants of former civilisation are destroyed. Journalists are executed, women are enslaved, borders are militarised, gay people are hanged in public, neighbours turn in neighbours and, yes, nonsanctioned books and literature are banned.
Flashbacks show how society devolved, and it mirrors today’s headlines: women gradually stripped of their reproductive rights, women’s marches, governmentimposed travel bans, mass shootings, growing religious intolerance.
Like Fahrenheit 451, Westworld dramatises the ways in which technology alters human behaviour and what happens when an ondemand culture loses sight of realworld timelines and the concept of accountability.
The series, inspired by Michael Crichton’s 1973 film of the same name, is set in an adult theme park where robots (hosts) cater to the whims of guests (humans). Topdollar technology equals instant gratification, but guess what? There are pitfalls in giving humans too much freedom. They cherrypick through the story lines and see only what they want to see, ignoring facts, truths and the bigger picture, until the park breaks out into its own version of a civil war. Absolute control devolves into violent chaos replete with gunslinging robots and, now, mechanised samurai.
Just when we think America has hit rock bottom, which is a feeling that usually sets in after a couple hours of cable news surfing, these grim scifi depictions show us we’re not there yet. The best of these cautionary tales as entertainment capitalise on the realities that could lead us there.
In Fahrenheit 451, the government ministry justifies why it’s plied citizens with alternative versions of American history.
‘‘It’s full of truths people can’t handle, so best to rewrite it,’’ an authority says.
And books are confusing, contend the authorities, because they contradict one another.
‘‘If you don’t want a person unhappy, you don’t give them two sides of a question to worry about.’’ — TCA
Fahrenheit 451 premieres tomorrow at 8.30pm on SoHo.