The Sublime in Frankenstein and Blade Runner
‘Sublime’ refers to the effect of nature on the human – the beauty and/or terror of the scene creates a sense of awe in the observer.
In Frankenstein, the sublime transcends romanticism and the traditions of gothic literature. Shelley’s vivid descriptions of the natural landscape convey a romantic appreciation of the beauty of nature, but they are mingled with a sense of Gothic terror. While the natural landscape is presented as a place of tranquillity and beauty, it is also amidst this natural beauty that Frankenstein’s monster confronts him and commits some of his atrocities.
Blade Runner presents a postmodern sublime, in which the natural world has become virtually obsolete. Visions of beauty (and particularly the beauty of nature) are still abundant in the film, and again there is the sense of mingled beauty and terror. Rather than being awed or impressed by the natural world, the viewer is in awe of the extent of human civilisation and the grandeur and magnitude of Los Angeles in 2019. The imposing pyramid structure with it’s twinkling lights presented to the viewer through the panning shot in the opening sequence is juxtaposed with the terrible acts which occur inside it. The scale and opulence of the Tyrell Corporation is also juxtaposed with the seedy underworld it towers over. The sublime in Blade Runner transcends romanticism and science fiction.
Blade Runner and Frankenstein Comparative Essay
Despite a significant time difference between the novel, Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus, written by Mary Shelley in 1818, and the film, Blade Runner, directed by Sir Ridley Scott in 1992, both composers use characters to warn future societies about the consequences of distorted values by emphasising a lack of key values. The characters who; do not respect the role nature has in life, value ...
Frankenstein Chapter 10:
The immense mountains and precipices that overhung me on every side – the sound of the river raging among the rocks, and the dashing of the waterfalls around, spoke of a power mighty as Omnipotence – and I ceased to fear, or to end before any being less almighty than that which had created and ruled the elements, here displayed in her most terrific guise. Still, as I ascended higher, the valley assumed a more magnificent and astonishing character. Ruined castles hanging on the precipices of piny mountains, the impetuous Arve, and cottages every here and there peeping forth from among the trees, formed a scene of singular beauty. But it was augmented and rendered sublime by the mighty Alps, whose white and shining pyramids and domes towered above all, as belonging to another earth, the habitations of another race of beings.
Excerpts from Wendel, E. L., “Worldspace in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner: From Romantic Nature to Artificiality”, 2006
Highlight the words which refer to techniques:
The Tyrell Corporation, residence and business place of Eldon Tyrell, the Godlike scientific “genius” behind the creation of the replicants, occupies a space central to Blade Runner’s narrative as well as this analysis. From the very outset of the film, in which we see an extreme long shot overlooking the futuristic cityscape of Los Angeles— defined by massive techno-towers and near perpetual twilight, interrupted only by violent lightening strikes and fiery explosions resulting in stunning plumes of flame—the camera visually guides us towards the grandiose Mayan-style pyramid structures that are the headquarters of the Tyrell Corporation. The slow-moving journey over the cityscape is never comfortable, and the ominous non-diegetic music makes matters all the more disconcerting. Throughout the movement, there are several cuts to an extreme close up of an eye, in which we see the fireballs of this horrific worldspace vividly reflected in the iris. The flames become the sensorial experience through which the eye relates to its physical environment, and because the eye is never associated with a specific character, it easily becomes our eye. Experience becomes something which must be negotiated via a non-natural, technologically overdetermined worldspace, whereby we are alienated by the extreme lack of anything familiar. The characters in Frankenstein are able to articulate their experience through the spatial surround of Nature, whereas Blade Runner is completely devoid of Nature.
The Essay on Brave New World, Blade Runner and Frankensteine
Essay Individuals who imaginatively challenge the values of their time do so due to their need to reaction against dominant social forces which, it taken to the extreme, threaten to destroy human reality, the human soul, the identity of humanity itself and its relationship with nature. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is an early 19th century cautionary tale examining the dark, self-destructive side of ...
…
What is especially interesting here are the noticeable differences between the two mountains, that is, Mont Blanc and the Tyrell Corporation. In Frankenstein, Victor reaches the village of Chamounix and later wanders the valley below Mont Blanc, and states that these “sublime and magnificent scenes afforded me the greatest consolation that I was capable of receiving.” He elaborates further, saying: “They congregated round me; the unstained snowy mountain-top, the glittering pinnacle, the pine woods, and ragged bare ravine; the eagle soaring amidst the clouds—they all gathered round me, and bade me be at peace” (Shelley, 91-92).
Any such peace, articulated through Romantic language evoking Nature is simply not possible in Blade Runner. Unlike Mont Blanc, and the valley below it, the Tyrell Corporation does not exhibit the illusive, indefinable beauty of sublime Nature, but rather embodies a synthetic artificiality—it is a structure which is both mathematically and mechanically defined because it is, like almost everything else in Blade Runner, a manmade creation.
How is the postmodern sublime different to the Romantic sublime? (In other words how does the context affect the way the sublime is viewed?) 3/4 page, with specific references to film and novel.