Not Comets, Robots or Russia: America Has Become the Threat in Hollywood’s Apocalyptic Fiction

A helicopter glides through smoke rising from the exploded Lincoln Memorial. Atom bombs flash and mushroom clouds bloom over the Los Angeles skyline. These images—from, respectively, the climax of Alex Garland’s latest film, Civil War, and the opening scene of Amazon’s blockbuster Fallout series—follow what is a curious cinematic tradition: In Hollywood’s tales of apocalypse, America’s landmarks must blow up.
In Independence Day, the Empire State Building and the White House are among the buildings blitzed by extraterrestrial invaders. In Armageddon, an errant meteor hits the Chrysler Building (Armageddon’s twin film Deep Impact, released the same year, has a comet level New York entirely). In Miracle Mile and Terminator 2: Judgment Day, it is, again, L.A. that goes nuclear—Hollywood can seemingly imagine nothing worse than the Dream Factory going up in a cloud of radioactive smoke—having been struck by the Soviets and killer robots, respectively.
However, there’s something different about how Civil War and Fallout arrive at their particular cataclysmic money shots. In Civil War, a despotic American president is in violent conflict with breakaway armies of U.S. citizens, culminating in an explosive final clash in Washington, D.C. In Fallout, meanwhile, it’s American corporate executives who fire those nukes on their own unsuspecting countryfolk. It is not murderous aliens, space rocks, Russia or out-of-control A.I. demolishing America here—in these and in a number of recent works of Hollywood apocalypse fiction, responsibility for the fall lies within America itself.
Where exceptional American heroes could once be trusted to band together and save the day, in Hollywood’s new apocalypse fictions, cooperation has become impossible. In Civil War, the warring factions are so splintered that combatants can’t always tell who it is that they’re fighting. Through the course of Fallout’s first season, meanwhile, we learn that society on the West Coast started to rebuild after the bombs dropped, but that it soon fell again, nuked back to zero by “vault-dwellers” with their own, opposing vision of America.
Division and distrust rule in the paranoid 2023 pairing of sci-fi thriller Leave the World Behind and doomy American picaresque The Sweet East, too. Leave the World Behind presents its characters with a smorgasbord of near-futuristic threats, from zombie self-driving cars to microwave weapons, but the attackers responsible for them are never identified—all we know is that America has become “dysfunctional enough” that the attacks will encourage the country to ultimately obliterate itself.
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