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Growing Up Absurd: Spielberg's Empire of the Sun
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13542 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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4 / 1988 |
1,665 Words |
| Author
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Paul Coates Paul Coates is professor of literature at McGill University,
Montreal, Canada. |
The idea that Steven Spielberg's imagination could ever become consubstantial with that of J.G. Ballard may seem unlikely--as unlikely as that a mogwai should become a gremlin. And yet in the cartoon Inferno of Gremlins, produced by Spielberg and directed by the appropriately named Joe Dante, just such a transformation of the cuddly into the menacing took place. Ronald Reagan's belief that there are no limits to what an American can become seems to be exemplified by the suburban whizkid with a gift for playful magic, who can turn himself into a Georgia feminist or a connoisseur of apocalypse. Or at least--as The Color Purple and Empire of the Sun show--he thinks he can.
Horrified Documentation
Ballard's Empire of the Sun is half a horrified documentation and half a celebration of his childhood experiences in a World War II Japanese internment camp near Shanghai. And prewar Shanghai is a place Spielberg has visited before, on a Hollywood set, in the stunning opening of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. The return to Shanghai is nevertheless hardly a homecoming for Spielberg. Ballard's mind is in fact rather unheimlich (unhomely, i.e., uncanny), and his visionary detachment is alien to the Spielberg who lays such stress on identification and family relationships. The film seeks to counteract that detachment, even on the formal level of translating into actual speech many of the things Ballard's Jim only ever thinks (in the book he does not tell Mr. Maxted that he's become an atheist). Here, Spielberg is seeking to breach Jim's frightening solipsism, and also to generate some dialogue. In doing so, however, he often ends up scrambling the logic of the original scene by fusing thoughts (often thoughts from elsewhere in the text)
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