Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Thursday, 11 May 2017
Free talk on storms TONIGHT, North London
What were the deadliest storms ever? Which storms changed the course of history? How have storms been portrayed in literature, art and films? What impact have they had on religions?And are they going to get even stronger?
These are some of the topics I will be tackling in my free talk at Highgate Library Civic and Cultural Centre, Croftdown Road, London NW5 1HB at 1930 tonight.
The talk is based on my book, Storm: Nature and Culture (Reaktion).
Labels:
art,
climate change,
film,
free,
global warming,
Highgate,
history,
hurricane,
lecture,
literature,
religion,
storm,
talk,
Tempest,
tornado
Thursday, 4 May 2017
Free talk on storms - a week today, North London
What were the deadliest storms ever? Which storms changed the course of history? What impact have storms had on religions? How have they been portrayed in literature, art and films? And are they going to get even stronger?
These are some of the topics I will be tackling in my free talk at Highgate Library Civic and Cultural Centre, Croftdown Road, London NW5 1HB at 1930 on Thursday 11 May.
The talk is based on my book, Storm: Nature and Culture (Reaktion).
Wednesday, 5 February 2014
Floods in films
Floods played a crucial
role in creating the disaster movie. One of the first examples was the 1933 film
Deluge. It opens with a tsunami heading towards New York City. Skyscrapers
collapse and people run for their lives. Then a huge wave bashes against the
shore.
To modern viewers, the
flood sequence looks a bit amateurish, with the buildings obviously models, but
it became famous, and was plundered for re-use in later films. Seventy years
after it was made, it demonstrated its resonance by influencing one of the most successful
motion pictures of all time, Roland Emmerich’s The Day After Tomorrow.
This time, it’s climate
change that brings a dreadful flood to New York City, which sees a ghost ship
sailing along Fifth Avenue, and a few human survivors taking refuge in the
Public Library. Typically, until the last minute, the politicians try to deny
there’s anything wrong.
When it was made in 1995,
the futuristic Waterworld, was the most expensive movie ever. It
features a world that has been completely submerged because of some dreadful
act by humans many years before. Kevin
Costner (pictured) plays ‘the Mariner’ a lone hi-tech yachtsman who sails around trying to
live like a decent fellow – not easy when most of the other remaining people
are thoroughly ghastly.
For
the full story, see my new book, Flood: Nature and Culture (Reaktion
Books ISBN 978 1 78023 196 9) which also
includes chapters on how floods have been portrayed in literature and art, on
history’s deadliest floods, on how flood myths appear in religions all over the
world, on how some of the most ambitious structures ever built by humans have
been erected to protect against flooding, and on the impact that climate change
may have on humanity’s attempts to combat floods in the future.
*This is me being interviewed about the floods on BBC Radio Kent - https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=withington%20flood%20kent&sm=1
Labels:
1933,
1995,
Day After Tomorrow,
deluge,
disaster,
film,
flood,
history,
Kevin Kostner,
Waterworld
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