Friday, 22 November 2013

District 9: Science Fiction & Representation

'District 9' is a 2009 dystopian science fiction thriller film directed by Neill Blomkamp.A dystopia is the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is often a planned structured society in which the conditions of life are deliberately made miserable, characterised by poverty, oppression, violence, disease, scarcity, and/or pollution for the benefit of a select minority or some unnatural societal goal.

A typical dystopia paints a picture of government or society attempting to exert control over free thought, authority, energy, freedom of information. Others focus on systematic discrimination and limitations based on a variety of factors - genetics, fertility, intelligence, and age being a few examples.

An underlying theme in 'District 9' is state reliance on multinational corporations as a government funded enforcement arm. As MNU represents the type of corporation which partners with governments, the negative portrayal of MNU in the film can be seen as a statement about the dangers of governments, particularly in their outsourcing of militaries and bureaucracies to private contractors.

Themes of racism and xenophobia are also put forward by the movie in the form of speciesism applied to the aliens. The use of the word "prawn" to describe the aliens is a reference to the Parktown prawn, a king cricket species considered a pest in South Africa.

1 comment:

  1. I think District 9 is one of the most powerful movies ever written. Yes, there is social commentary and parallels to apartheid, racism and corruption seen in South Africa. But when you get down to the true essence of the story, you will see that it’s about the struggle in doing the right thing. No one in this movie is safe from the evils that are represented. There is no clear villain and no clear hero. Yes, Wikus serves as a protagonist. But many times, he made selfish decisions that would not count him as heroic at all. It just happens that he ended up doing the right thing. By the end of the movie, you’re left to wonder if you would do what he did if you were in his place or save your own skin, as is human instinct.

    -- Wally Howe

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