Life and the Big Screen: Media, Design, and the Apocalypse, by William Bostwick
Posted by core77.com's design blog in ARTS, BLOGROLL, CREATIVITY, DESIGN, INTERNET, MEDIA, VISUAL

Independence Day’s money shot. The end of the world, or just the beginning?
For weeks, Iron Man has had the design world convulsing with what can only be called a grand maul geek-out. The lead character, Tony Stark, represents the tech-happy dad in all of us. A billionaire industrialist/master engineer, he builds a powered exoskeleton and becomes the technologically advanced superhero and all-around bad-ass, Iron Man. The cars, the girls, the computers: he’s like Inspector Gadget in a mid-life crisis.
But the future hasn’t always been so pretty. Let’s rewind, way back, to 1996, when high-tech gadgetry wasn’t a blessing, but a curse, when the blue glow of Stark’s mechanical heart heralded nothing less than the end of the world. I’m talking about Independence Day.
Here, Jeff Goldblum’s computer scientist is a straight-up nerd and the world’s armies use old-school Morse code to coordinate their attacks. The blue light that pours out of the alien spaceships is deadly and depressing, like the TV glow from suburban windows. Independence Day didn’t come up with this idea—here’s Jack Kerouac almost 50 years earlier describing the lone poet in a wasteland world: “I see him in future years stalking along with full rucksack, in suburban streets, passing the blue television windows of homes, alone, his thoughts the only thoughts not electrified to the Master Switch.” Will Smith’s Capt. Steven Hiller sees that switch flipped on, full blast, and watches the White House go up in electric flames.
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