The Cars that Ate the World. Images of vehicles in post-apocalyptic movies

Andrzej Juszczyk

Abstract


The article concerns the motif of the vehicle as an important element of post-apocalyptic world. Some post-apocalyptic films show visions of humanity after the catastrophe using the image of the car which not only constitutes the element of space, but often influences the motivation or performs a symbolic function. Visual aspect of post-apo cars, lack of traditional destinations and almost compulsive using of vehicles by the protagonist and antagonist in such films like Mad Max series (directed by George Miller), Hell (directed by Tim Fehlbaum), Downstream (directed by Simone Bartesaghi), Damnation Alley (directed by Jack Smight), The Book of Eli (directed by Albert and Allen Hughes) seem to be really important for the vision of future (and contemporary) humanity.


Keywords


post-apocalypse; road movie; popular culture; dystopia; car; post-humanism; cyborg

Full Text:

PDF (Język Polski)

References


Baudrillard J., Symulakry i symulacja, przeł. S. Królak, Warszawa 2005.

Berger J., After the End: Representations of Post-Apocalypse, Minneapolis 1999.

Cohan S., Rea Hark I., Introduction, [w:] eaedem, The Road Movie Book, pod red. S. Cohan, I. Rea

Hark, Londyn 1997.

Falconer D., “We don’t need to know the way Home”. The disappearance of the road in the Mad

Max trilogy, [w:] The Road Movie Book, pod red. S. Cohan, I. Rea Hark, Londyn 1997.

Jameson F., Postmodernizm, czyli logika kulturowa późnego kapitalizmu, przeł. M. Płaza, Kraków




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/ff.2016.34.2.47
Date of publication: 2016-12-22 13:37:18
Date of submission: 2016-07-07 18:48:19


Statistics


Total abstract view - 1314
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF (Język Polski) - 840

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2016 Andrzej Juszczyk

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.