The Book of Eli and The SDMB Post-apocalyptic Film Festival

With the release next week of The Book of Eli, following closely on the heels of an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, it seems that films set after the collapse of civilization are approaching film noir or westerns as a major genre. Whether through war, environmental disasters or zombies run amok, we can’t seem to get enough of tragic characters in tattered clothing wandering through a blasted landscape.

I’m kind of a fan of the genre myself. Some of my favorites include:

Mad Max
The Road Warrior
The Quiet Earth
28 Days Later
Children of Men

Others I’ve seen but didn’t necessarily care for include:

The Postman
The Stand (made-for-TV version)
Waterworld
I am Legend
The Omega Man

…but I haven’t come close to seeing all the films of this type that may be out there, I reckon. Feel free to fill in the gaps with some more obscure favorites of your own.

As for The Book of Eli, looks to be nicely filmed, but from what I’ve seen of the story, it appears to be a something of a rehash of The Road Warrior, with the main characters fighting over a Bible(!) rather than gasoline. I’m not too optimistic.

The Postman is my favorite post-apocalyptic movie of all time and most people who bash it haven’t even seen it.

There are three versions of Day of The Triffids to choose from. I’m partial to the 1962 version myself.

The Day After TV Special depicting the US after a nuclear war with Jason Robards, arguably it’s just an apocalypse movie, only part of it is post-apocalyptic.

On the Beach Nukes again, based on the book by Nevile Shute.

12 Monkeys

It’s probably a terrible movie, and I’m letting vague memories of seeing it a dozen times at the Drive-In while higher than a kite (oooh, pretty colors!) affect my memories, but I can’t help but throw out

Damnation Alley

Oh damn, now I’m watching clips of Damnation Alley on YouTube. The whole movie is there.

This, on LSD. Good times!

A Boy and His Dog
Cyborg
Le Dernier Combat (The Last Combat)

I recently re-watched “Children of Men,” “28 Days Later,” and “28 Weeks Later” and they’re all pretty damned good. The scene in “Children of Men” when all the soldiers and immigrants stop fighting to let the newborn baby and mother go by brings me to tears even thinking about it - one of the most powerful moments in all cinematic history, in my opinion. Both of the “28… Later” movies had moments in them that just frustrated the hell out of me; yeah, for lack of a horseshoe we lost the war and all that, but damn! So frustrating when one little error causes SOOOO much devastation. It’s not a complaint about the movies, mind you, just more about life in general.

I really enjoyed “Zombieland” and “Shaun of the Dead,” too. The movies that should have been so much better than they were in this genre are “Independence Day” and “The Day After Tomorrow.” They were horribly frustrating for me, a lover of this genre, because they were so close to being awesome, yet managed to miss the mark.

I actually really like the tv series of “The Stand.” There was some truly excellent casting for that (and some awful casting, too - Molly Ringwald as Fran and Laura San Giacomo as Nadine were real clunkers). I’m thinking about re-watching that soon, too.

City of Ember (about a Fallout 3-like underground city/shelter)

Doomsday (Rhona Mitra as a sort of sexier Snake Pliskin)

Escape From New York

I am Legend (remake of The Omega Man, which ws a remake of the original I Am Legend)

The Matrix films

Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (Hayao Miyazaki anime)

Tank Girl

The Terminator films

I’m guessing that you didn’t live through the Cold War, because it is a genre usually called post-apocalyptic. Much like film-noir can overlap crime movies, the post-apocalyptic genre can overlap dystopian, scifi, fantasy or a combination of these. Anyway, the bulk of these movies were made in the late 1970s to the early 1990s. Mad Max probably helped spur 100s of these films.

I’ve literally sat through at least 100 of these films that were produced by Italian film companies or independent US film companies. Most aren’t very memorable.

Here are some movies not mentioned yet that are memorable (not necessarily in a good way):

2019, After the Fall of New York
Cherry 2000
Death Race 2000
Five
Hell Comes to Frogtown
Night of the Comet
Panic in Year Zero!
Parasite
The Quiet Earth
Rats: Night of Terror
Six-String Samurai
Threads
The Ultimate Warrior
Zardoz

Hey, we made Threadspotting!

I dimly remember that one, and likewise dimly remember that it’s fairly dire. The ‘Landmaster’ vehicle featured in the film is pretty cool, however, and there seems to be quite a lot of info on it floating around the 'Net.

It occurs to me that the first one of this type of movie I ever saw was “The World, the Flesh and the Devil”, wth Harry Belafonte. Was this (and On the Beach, both 1959) the first of the genre? I have no idea.

Actually, I am a Cold War baby (born 1954), but for whatever reason, a lot of the minor films you mention have always flown below my radar. It just eseems that there has been an increase on the number of A-list films with this general theme in the past few years.

Nope. “Five” was made in 1951. “Captive Women” was made in 1952.

I see. Yes. The disaster film started making a come back when Global Warming became the new social/political theme that Hollywood jumped on. From what I understand, alot of people started noticing a few years that 2012 was coming up and the Mayan calender/end of the world meme reappeared. So a bunch of scripts were written on that theme, since the end of times is coming up…

So, if you are just considering A-list movies in this vein, there are very few. Which reminds me, has anyone said “Planet of the Apes” yet?

Maybe, but I can really only think of one film that deals with Global Warming (The Day After Tomorrow), and one that deals with the Mayan 2012 thing. And both of those are pretty recent.

I think the reason such films have become more noticeable of late is simply that the big budget sci-fi blockbusters in general have become more and more common, with more marketing behind them, so the sub genre of apocalyptic movies get more advertizing, money, and attention then they used to.

No mention of the Resident Evil and Romero zombie films?

Also they are remaking Romero’s 70s film The Crazies.
FWIW, I’d like to see more “society slowly unraveling” films like On The Beach, Children of Men and the original Mad Max.

In that sort of “pre-apocalypse” genre of films, you have Miracle Mile and When Worlds Collide (also being remade). There is also some indie film I saw about 5-10 years ago that follows a bunch of people in LA I think as they try to get to each other before some inevetable (but vague) catastrophy. I can’t remember what it was called though.

How about something French? Time of the Wolf was kinda similar to The Road, and came out five years before the movie adaptation.

Oh, crap. How could I have forgotten Reign of Fire? Frankly demented plot and a bit of a guilty pleasure, but I put it in the favorites column anyway.

Can’t believe I’m the first to mention Planet of the Apes.

Sorry. Post #14.