Paul Verhoeven’s Sci-Fi Trilogy: Understanding the Media Influence on Capitalism, Individualism, and Patriotism in the United States

Keywords

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Issue Date

2017-08-31

Language

en

Document type

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Title

ISSN

Volume

Issue

Startpage

Endpage

DOI

Abstract

To examine such components of American culture as capitalism, individualism, and patriotism, I will analyze how these three themes are depicted in the three movies Paul Verhoeven directed in Hollywood: RoboCop (1987), Total Recall (1990), and Starship Troopers (1997). Then, I will examine how the Dutch director remediates the above-mentioned pillars of American identity and transforms them into consumerism, conformism, and hegemony to criticize the national self-delusion forged by media. I will demonstrate how Verhoeven engages in a dialectic dialogue with media via media. In other words, I will investigate how the Dutch director uses filmic techniques and genre conventions to satirize the vices of American culture and society of the 1980s and 1990s. To do that, I will scrutinize the combination of such genres as science fiction, western, and action relying on Barry Keith Grant, Steve Neale, and Rick Altman’s theories on genre. Then, I will conduct a shot-by-shot analysis, a practice forged by such scholars as Michael Ryan, Melissa Lenos, and Ed Sikov. Finally, relying on the theory of Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, I will explain how the director draws our attention to the media manipulation using such concepts as immediacy and hypermediacy.

Description

Citation

Faculty

Faculteit der Letteren