The odds are never in your favor: the form and function of American cinema's neoliberal dystopias

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The odds are never in your favor: the form and function of American cinema's neoliberal dystopias. / Frame, Gregory.
In: New Review of Film and Television Studies, Vol. 17, No. 3, 30.09.2019, p. 379-397.

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Frame G. The odds are never in your favor: the form and function of American cinema's neoliberal dystopias. New Review of Film and Television Studies. 2019 Sept 30;17(3):379-397. Epub 2019 May 29. doi: 10.1080/17400309.2019.1622894

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Frame, Gregory. / The odds are never in your favor: the form and function of American cinema's neoliberal dystopias. In: New Review of Film and Television Studies. 2019 ; Vol. 17, No. 3. pp. 379-397.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The odds are never in your favor: the form and function of American cinema's neoliberal dystopias

AU - Frame, Gregory

PY - 2019/9/30

Y1 - 2019/9/30

N2 - This article explores the ways in which dystopian cinema that emerged in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008 provided pointed critique of two aspects of neoliberalism’s economic and social policies: the deliberate imposition of precariousness across the working population which neutralizes dissent and forestalls collective opposition, and spatial segregation of rich and poor that is rigidly enforced. In In Time (Andrew Niccol, 2011), The Hunger Games (Gary Ross, 2012) and Elysium (Neil Blomkamp, 2013), the poor are plagued by uncertain employment, housing and healthcare, barely surviving under authoritarian regimes organized in favor of the rich and powerful. Despite the pointedness of this critique, however, this article also demonstrates how all three examples remain preoccupied with the possibility that heroic individuals can effect radical change, thereby providing a buttress to one of neoliberalism’s central animating constructs. In some senses, they indulge in a form of ‘cruel optimism,’ suggesting that precariousness and inequality could be overcome by individuals with special qualities, when real solutions to these problems seem so elusive. This article therefore questions the purpose of these films in the contemporary moment, where neoliberalism is in its death throes, but nothing coherent has yet emerged to replace it.

AB - This article explores the ways in which dystopian cinema that emerged in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008 provided pointed critique of two aspects of neoliberalism’s economic and social policies: the deliberate imposition of precariousness across the working population which neutralizes dissent and forestalls collective opposition, and spatial segregation of rich and poor that is rigidly enforced. In In Time (Andrew Niccol, 2011), The Hunger Games (Gary Ross, 2012) and Elysium (Neil Blomkamp, 2013), the poor are plagued by uncertain employment, housing and healthcare, barely surviving under authoritarian regimes organized in favor of the rich and powerful. Despite the pointedness of this critique, however, this article also demonstrates how all three examples remain preoccupied with the possibility that heroic individuals can effect radical change, thereby providing a buttress to one of neoliberalism’s central animating constructs. In some senses, they indulge in a form of ‘cruel optimism,’ suggesting that precariousness and inequality could be overcome by individuals with special qualities, when real solutions to these problems seem so elusive. This article therefore questions the purpose of these films in the contemporary moment, where neoliberalism is in its death throes, but nothing coherent has yet emerged to replace it.

KW - 'cruel optimism'

KW - Neoliberalism

KW - cinema

KW - class divides

KW - dystopia

KW - precarity

U2 - 10.1080/17400309.2019.1622894

DO - 10.1080/17400309.2019.1622894

M3 - Article

VL - 17

SP - 379

EP - 397

JO - New Review of Film and Television Studies

JF - New Review of Film and Television Studies

SN - 1740-0309

IS - 3

ER -