时间:2025-05-01 17:52:06 来源:网络整理编辑:綜合
Garth Davis' dystopian sci-fi, Foe, has been getting some lukewarm reviews. But there's one surefire
Garth Davis' dystopian sci-fi,Foe, has been getting some lukewarm reviews. But there's one surefire element of the film, based on Iain Reid's 2018 novel, that actually deserves its moment in the burning, burning sun — and it's not necessarily the beautiful people feeling all the feelings within it.
It's the way the world as we've known it is actually ending, often incrementally but surely. And you'd better believe it's all thanks to climate change.
Set in the year 2065, Foeis a work of speculative fiction that presents an Earth that has become almost but not entirely inhospitable, when fresh water and inhabitable landare scarce. They're not human rights but instead the most important capital a human being can own. It's Mad Maxwithout the steampunk or gang violence.
Reid's novel keeps specifics of the apocalypse off the page, but the film, which Reid and Davis co-wrote, gives details at the top. In this version of America, the government's Federal Climate Alert System has become useless. Human displacement sits at the centre of the global climate crisis, with nations uprooted by extreme weather events. Air quality has declined and respiratory conditions have risen. People are encouraged to stay indoors to avoid the extreme heat. Folks live off-grid if they can, using solar panels and reusing their waste water, but it's all a little too late. At the core of the narrative, humanoid AI robot substitutes have replaced human labour in many industries.
SEE ALSO:'Foe' review: Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal can't save this empty sci-fi messQuietly surviving on a barren, isolated Midwest property is married couple Hen and Junior, played by Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal. In this future, inhabitable land is mainly owned by companies or governments and used for farming; as for the rest, inheritance rules, as Junior's property is fifth generation-owned. Above the dusty, cracked earth of the property, extreme weather eventsfrom intense dust storms to extreme heat are an everyday occurrence. Only one tree survives on the land, kept alive by the couple's waste water. In fact, water is such a precious commodity that we regularly see Junior and Hen drinking cans of beer instead of water first thing in the morning — perhaps beyond mild hydration, beer doesn't hurt for dealing with the end of the world, either. Though for someone trying to conserve water, Hen sure has some lengthy shower cries.
Foeshows the end of the world in an isolated, domestic silence for two people, but it's also not quite ended. At every turn, it seems people are still working hard to keep surviving the harsh conditions. However, Junior and Hen's quiet, rural life changes with the arrival of a man called Terrance (Aaron Pierre), who works for a government-backed company called OuterMore, wielding a plan to evacuate the planet — but notably slowly.
Plans to move people off-planet to a colossal space station near Earth are well underway, moving away from a "climate migration strategy" to simply getting the hell out of here. Terrance mentions that the moon, Mars, and other planets were possibilities built for the "first wave of temporary settlement", but due to their distance from Earth and the time it will take to go back and forth to build a new colony there, OuterMore has instead built an enormous planet of its own near Earth and readies humans for permanent relocation to space through years of training.
People are chosen randomly through a lottery to participate in the first phase of the space program, known as The Installation, a two-year placement on the station to test its readiness for a whole planet to live on — but Terrance notes Junior's physical strength as a positive attribute for it. Notably, the program isn't optional for those chosen, instead functioning as a form of "fortunate conscription". Through discussions of this station around Junior and Hen's dining room table, Foelightly takes aim at the billionaire space raceand billion-dollar plans to terraform other planets like Mars. "Why should you be spending money up there when you should be fixing things down here?" Hen asks.
By no means is Foethe only film to predict the end of the world through climate change and eventual human relocation to space — even in recent years, we've seen the likes of 2016 sci-fi Passengerssharing similar scenarios. But it's something films have only started to really hammer home within the last few decades, with a notable rise in the 2000s. Though scientists had been warning of the coming threat for frustrating decades, and weather disaster films had long rampaged through cinemas, filmmakers finally seemed to harness these legitimate fears in the 2000s and 2010s, punishing earthlings' blatant disregard for the planet with brutal, extreme weather-driven consequences in films like The Day After Tomorrow, Geostorm, 2012,and the Keanu Reeves remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still.
Not simply allowing viruses and sentient machines to destroy the world as we know it, rising sea levels caused by a warming planet finally got their moment in the 2000s, notably with Steven Spielberg’s 2001 film A.I. Artificial Intelligence— also aligned with Foein terms of AI human replacements and self-aware robots in the coming apocalypse. In the film, set in the 22nd century, melting Arctic ice causes catastrophic flooding in coastal cities, meaning widespread human displacement, starvation, and death. New York is underwater. The global population plummets and humanoid robots step in for both human labour and companionship because they're "never hungry and ... did not consume resources beyond those of their first manufacture."
In the book Hollywood Wants to Kill You, Rick Edwards and Dr. Michael Brooks write of Hollywood's tendency to speed things up when it comes to planetary death by climate change, to get to the dramatically perilous stuff overnight instead of showing how it happens and how we could have stopped it gradually. The authors particularly skewer the films Geostormand The Day After Tomorrow,which predict an overnight climate overhaul, a catastrophic tipping point that sees the planet plunged into every kind of extreme weather Hollywood can conjure at once.
"It turns out that governments, both Hollywood-imagined and real-life, aren't really interested in long-term gains that involve short-term pain," Edwards and Brooks write. The film 2012also does this, cutting straight to the chase, but at least the movie consistently reiterates that scientists and world leaders have known what's coming for years.
But one of the most realistic parts of the potential end of the world in Foeis not that we'll all inevitably shack up with a smokin' partner with an endless supply of PBRs. It's that some things will happen slowly, the decline of the planet's habitable spaces slowly increasing as CO2 levels skyrocket, climate science misinformationcontinues, and government inaction prevails. (Some impacts, like amplified Western U.S. wildfires and increased flooding, are happening rapidly.)
Foeisn't a perfect representation of a future Earth, notably being the experience of two sad yet socioeconomically advantaged white people, citizens who by no means are on the frontline of the climate crisis. And notably, climate doomism itself gets us nowhere — we're not completely up the bone dry creek yet. Despite how things appear, we haven't passed a point of no return, and earthlings still have the power to either exacerbate the planet's problems or seal them in stone.
Instead, Foeis a cautionary tale, a hypothetical endgame. One that's slow but sure, and without action on climate change, could very well be what the end of the Earth looks like.
How to watch: Foe is now streaming on Prime Video.
TopicsFilm
The Weeknd teases new music in Instagram post2025-05-01 17:47
2019劇本再現 ?利物浦豪奪六連勝 曼城還會丟分嗎2025-05-01 17:43
日媒 :約尼奇下周正式回歸大阪櫻花 轉會費大幅降低2025-05-01 16:56
安帥迎西甲100戰裏程碑 砍下233分僅次於穆裏尼奧2025-05-01 16:55
Michael Phelps says goodbye to the pool with Olympic gold2025-05-01 16:53
就差最後一秒 !西班牙人憾平巴薩 主場對皇薩1勝1平2025-05-01 16:41
數據不說謊!C羅貢獻少到可憐 服老就該坦然離隊 ?2025-05-01 16:25
50萬善款已籌得!患病女足球員治愈概率較大 夢想進國家隊2025-05-01 15:38
This 'sh*tpost' bot makes terrible memes so you don't have to2025-05-01 15:32
水慶霞 :女足開啟室外正常訓練 以平常心備戰亞運會2025-05-01 15:12
'The Flying Bum' aircraft crashes during second test flight2025-05-01 17:43
開倒車!利物浦鐵腰竟成今年射手王 直呼進球太爽2025-05-01 17:29
巴薩夏窗補強後防線欲撬國米 3000萬歐可簽德弗賴2025-05-01 17:25
西甲官推為加泰德比預熱 曬武磊絕平巴薩經典進球2025-05-01 17:12
17 questions you can answer if you're a good communicator2025-05-01 16:45
買房救紅魔 ?兩王者攪渾曼聯選帥 羅傑斯曲線救國2025-05-01 16:44
迪巴拉+達尼洛!尤文大心髒先生 2度製造補時進球2025-05-01 16:31
卡爾德克入籍一事終止 歸化策略未助國足衝世界杯2025-05-01 16:28
Fyvush Finkel, Emmy winner for 'Picket Fences,' dies at 932025-05-01 16:24
個人傳記作者:梅西曾差點去皇馬 巴薩嫌他工資高2025-05-01 15:41