The Lazarus

1852 Words4 Pages

Our Relationship With the Environment: It’s Complicated
According to Epa.gov, every minute 12000 tons of carbon dioxide are added to the atmosphere and every hour, 1,692 acres of productive dry land becomes desert. However, Blockbuster movies typically do not have this type of alarming information because that is not what the public wants to see. Ironically, it is interesting how humanity finds it enjoyable to watch apocalyptic films, especially when the culprit isn’t us because it is easier to blame to aliens than to take the blame for destroying our only home. Christopher Nolan , director of the epic sci-fi blockbuster Interstellar, uses intense music, nostalgia, camera movements, and mise en scene to demonstrate how apocalyptic our future …show more content…

When that mission did not bring back any answers, the protagonists were forced to go on a mission to find any of those planets because humanity was getting desperate for a new home, on a ship called Endurance, which was quite literally the equivalent of modern day Noah’s Ark.While the Endurance mission is off trying to colonize space, the humans left on earth were continuing with their destructive treatment of the earth; over harvesting the corn, releasing tons of carbon into the air,and using GMOs and pesticides to aid in their farming. An imagery that was strikingly ironic was a scene when Cooper’s (Matthew McConaughey) farmhouse, once white, is being filmed whilst the camera is panning out, which progressively captures the desolate, infertile wasteland. The white ( which symbolizes hope because it alludes to heavenly light) home sitting covered in the dirt miles away from other houses conveys the feeling of loneliness Cooper must be feeling while up in space all by himself. Nevertheless, it is ironic because his home is a farm house, but he is in a super high-tech spaceship. Thus, the film’s repetitive message is that human existence and development cannot coexist with the well being of the environment, wherever they go, as shown by the ironic moments in the

Open Document