Abstract

The idea of national identity as threatened by foreign invasions has been at the centre of many popular Science Fiction (SF) films in the United States of America. In alien invasion films, aggressive colonisers stand for collective anxieties and can be read “as metaphors for a range of perceived threats to humanity, or particular groups, ranging from 1950s communism to the AIDS virus and contemporary ‘illegal aliens’ of human origin” (King and Krzywinska, 2000: 31-2). Such films can effectively tell historical and cultural specificities, including gender concerns. In them, the characters’ sense of belonging to a nation is destabilised in a number of ways, resulting in identity crisis in most cases. A fervent need to defend the nation from the malevolent strangers is combined with an alienation of the self in the search of individual salvation or survival.The present analysis will attempt to illustrate how threats to configurations of power are employed in a contemporary alien invasion film: The War of the Worlds (Steven Spielberg, 2005). Specifically, the film takes the narrative of destruction to suggest the destabilisation of US national power within the context of post September 11, together with a subtle disruption of the gender and sexual status quo. Indeed, new ways of understanding masculinity and fatherhood assault both the public and the private spaces of its white male heterosexual protagonist, Ray, performed by popular actor Tom Cruise. Ambiguous patriotism, identity crises and selfishness are at the core of this contemporary version of H.G. Wells’s landmark novel.

Highlights

  • The present analysis will attempt to illustrate how threats to configurations of power are employed in a contemporary alien invasion film: The War of the Worlds (Steven Spielberg, 2005)

  • The male need of facing a superior enemy in the form of a massive alien invasion is present in many other Science Fiction (SF) films of the 1950s

  • Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Siegel, 1956), Invaders From Mars (Sears, 1953), It came from Outer Space (Arnold, 1953) or I Married a Monster from Outer Space (Fowler, 1958) depict alien beings who invade and/or penetrate human bodies, causing identity problems

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Summary

Introduction: the alien as a threat in the SF movie

The construction of the ‘other’ as a dangerous outsider prevails in many SF films, where the alien invader is associated to images of barbarism, aggression and difference This difference needs to be eliminated since it threatens to enter and disrupt Western society. Patriotism, or the proud feeling of belonging to a nation, can suggest an effective way to contribute to fight against a common enemy.4 As it has been illustrated, this collective responsibility is denied in favour of self-interest in The War of the Worlds. Ogilvy confesses that he has a plan to fight the tripods and in doing so, liberate his country from this threat This sequence in the basement accounts for the different reactions towards the coming of the ‘other’, suggested by Ray and Ogilvy’s attitudes towards the aliens. The film uses the topic of the hostile alien invasion to suggest this uncertainty and lack of agreement and engagement to face the problem of an aggressive invasion

Terrorism and identity crisis
Conclusion
22 References
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