If you're living in a shiny happy world where everything is provided to you, and your white pajamas never ever get stained, then chances are you're in a false utopia. Someone's going to be coming and harvesting your organs, or culling you at age 30, or drugging you into obedience. The fake paradise built on a foundation of shit seems to flourish most during times when technology seems to be solving all our problems (like during the dotcom boom.) Click through for a list of false utopias.
You could argue that most dystoipan movies are really false utopias, because the rulers of a dark, bleak dystopia (like, say, Brazil) still try to pretend that everything is perfect and wonderful. The difference is, most dystopias start out bleak and dark, and just get more horrid until the protagonist is forced to confront the darkness around him/her. But in the "false utopia" subcategory of dystopias, everything is bright and wonderful, and the main character is either getting some great drugs, or having lots of fun sex, or both in the case of Brave New World.
The "false utopia" genre, says Transparency Now,
shows humanity lost in false paradises of technology and simulation. In one subcategory, we see enclosed high-tech cities or habitations with apparently well-ordered societies full of people who are trapped by their dependence on automation and computers. They may also live decadent lifestyles that serve to distract them from the truth of their circumstances.
Here's a brief and cheerful history of fake utopias:
1909. "The Machine Stops" by E.M. Forster. Forster's reaction to some of H.G. Wells' more optimistic fiction. In the distant future, humans live underground, each in a separate "cell," with all of his or her needs provided for by the all-powerful Machine. Human culture stagnates, and people wrongly believe they can't survive on the surface of the Earth without protection. Over time, people start to worship the Machine like a god, forgetting they made it. And then eventually the Machine starts to break down.
1932. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. It's 2540, and everybody's drugged up to the gills on Soma, a sort of anti-depressant/psychotropic, and people can learn in their sleep. There's lots and lots of casual sex and orgies, and people chanting "orgy porgy" while having orgies. It's awesome. Oh, and people are incubated artificially instead of being born "naturally." The lower classes are engineered to be less intelligent and curious than the upper classes.
1956. The City And The Stars by Arthur C. Clarke. It's a billion years in the future, and humans have mostly abandoned Earth to go off and create super-ultra-awesome minds in space. In the domed city of Diaspar, people lead perfect lives, governed by the Central Computer. When they die, the Computer stores their memories and grows new bodies for them, making them nearly immortal. But then it turns out humans have been lied to about why they have to stay on Earth.
1971. The Futurological Congress by Stanislaw Lem. Ijon Tichy goes to sleep (or does he?) and wakes up in the trippy year of 2039, an utopian era without money or want. Everybody's mood is kept carefully controlled using drugs. Many people have pointed out the similarities of this drug-induced utopia to The Matrix: At one point, Tichy's girlfriend offers him a choice between two pills: The black pill will make him forget their relationship, the white pill will make him commit more deeply.
1976. Logan's Run, the movie based on the 1969 novel by William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson. Everything is perfect in the domed city, with all the casual sex and meaningless hedonism you could ever want. Machines provide for all of your needs, but there's one drawback — when you turn 30, you have to die.
1994. The Giver by Lois Lowry. In this award-winning young-adult novel, it's a perfect world: bad feelings and conflict have been eliminated, thanks to perfect communication and drugs. (It's always drugs.) People get around by bicycle, and there are very few cars or airplanes. Romantic love and sexual desire (called "stirrings") are illegal, and are suppressed via medication. Instead, couples are matched up based on compatibility and can adopt up to two children from "birth mothers": one boy and one girl. Here's a Christian review warning against this book based on a misconception that it's actually utopian.
1998. The Truman Show. Truman lives in a lovely small town, surrounded by nice people, with possibly the only job in the insurance industry that doesn't totally suck. The only problem is, he can never leave town, and he's kept scared of the ocean by a fake story about his father drowning. He doesn't realize that everything in his world is a lie, and he's really one of the Pussycat Dolls.
2002. Equilibrium. I hesitated to include this movie, because it's not much of a utopia. It's sort of bleak and nasty, and Christian Bale will do gun-aerobics in your face. But it does have many of the hallmarks, including people being drugged into flat affect-hood.
2005. The Island. Ewan McGregor lives in a utopian community where everything is perfect, and all of his choices are made for him. As usual in these types of stories, everybody's told that the rest of the world is uninhabitable due to some kind of toxic disaster. Everybody yearns to win the "Lottery" and go to "The Island," a tropical paradise — but it turns out The Island is made of people. Sort of.










Comments
E. M. Forster--the Horatio Hornblower guy? No, wait, that was C. S. Forester.
Oh, whoah. E. M. Forster, the HOWARD'S END GUY?
Is the Machine Stops worth a read? Only one I haven't seen/read...
You missed one! There's this perfect society, see, where all the advantages, breaks, and opportunity are given to a small number of elite families who own about 70% of everything. They are completely unaware of the true reality, however, and of the 98% of people clawing their way through meaningless, humdrum jobs and losing their children in unnecessary wars...
Oh, wait. This is about FICTIONAL distopias. Never mind.
Oh, you forgot Zardoz, Sean Connery's romp as a barbarian among the immortal happy zombies.
Also, before there was The Island, there was Clonus, its parthenogenic plot-parent.
Gotta love illiteration.
Any future with Jenny Agutter in it is Utopia no matter what.
CJA- I do have to give you props here.
Because somehow you managed to read that horribly-designed and practically illegible "transparency now" site. Something my eyeballs haven't been able to accomplish for many, many years now.
And that Logan's Run picture is purty.
2005. The Island. Ewan McGregor stars in what he thinks is going to be a blockbuster action movie, but what he doesn't realize is he's really stuck in the movie Clonus, which was thoroughly and deservedly skewered by MST 3000. Fixed.
Side boob!
What about Parts: the Clonus Horror? Crappy athletic-inspired uniforms = false utopia, right?
On a note related to the actual post, a friend of mine told his then-girlfriend that The Truman Show was about aliens. She spent the entire movie waiting for the aliens to show up and was thoroughly confused the entire time. She really thought she just missed the alien sub-plot or something.
Yeah, that relationship didn't last.
@B: er, yeah. Typing too slow here, sorry. What you said.
THX-1138 is another perfect example of the genre.
Any society with Jenny Agutter in a mini dress is a Utopia as far as I'm concerned.
I was going to post something snarky about Parts: The Clonus Horror, but I see I have been beaten to the punch.
@Garrison Dean:
Any society with Jenny Agutter in a mini dress and later swimming naked in a Pond is a Utopia as far as I'm concerned!
@FoolsRun:
About how it's actually better than The Island?
Yes, I agree.
Caveat: it was the name of one of my many punk bands during my formative years.
I believe the age of death in the Logan's Run novel was 21 (also: more drugs!). They upped it to 30 for the movie.
I wrote a "false utopia" script once... they're a lot of fun to play around with, but you've got to fit a lot of sex into them, else the utopian front collapses pretty quick.
Is Trek too obvious? Or does the occasional retro-active invasion by the Borg disqualify it?
@Tommmcatt: Beat me to it. Every time I see a dystopian society store, I can't help but think that we're all living in one.
I was going to post something about Jenny Agutter = utopia, but I'll just take off my pants and start masturbating.
@Miranda Kali:
d'oh! FALSE utopia. ('course there is the fact that only those who conform to tacky, pantsuit fashion seem to succeed in the Federation)
Ah Logan's Run... the film that definitely established that I liked girls.
Truman Show and The Island make the cut and THX-1138 doesn't? Even Zardoz as pointed out above has more business on this list than these two. The Island was just a lousy movie (okay there goes my Zardoz argument), and The Truman show doesn't even qualify...
@Sleepyhead: You might want to leave work first.
Eon Flux, although not the best movie in the world, is a really good example of this.
Zardoz is an interesting thing to bring up in this discusss.... zzzzzzzzzz
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HUH!? Oh sorry. I tend to doze off when in the presence of anything Zardoz.
@loserface: I have to confess I thought it was a pretty terrible movie the one time I saw it, but it does get props for predicting what Casual Encounters will eventually evolve into two decades before craigslist even existed.
Equilibrium is fair game for the list because of the omnipresent Big Brotherish type figure on every screen and in every public square hologram telling people how wonderful things are. :-)
How about Gattaca? Wonderful future... unless your parents didn't have you carefully designed down to the last base pair. Have fun sweeping trash.
Rollerball (the original, not the bugf*** remake). No war. No hunger. No violence. All one big happy corporate family. Oh, the CEO of the Energy Corporation wants your wife for his own. Sorry. And the CFO wants your kids... and kidney.
And, oh, maybe The Matrix. Not exactly a utopia inside the matrix (just the normal world) but the fact that it's all a big lie seems to make it a false utopia of sorts.
Star Trek. A moneyless, incentiveless society where everyone either performs Shakespeare or plays with a string quartet in their spare time, are utterly full of themselves and politically correct so far beyond a fault it hurts. Deal with it fanbois. ;-)
What about We by Yevgeny Zamyatin?
Oh sorry. I tend to doze off when in the presence of anything Zardoz.
Piffle. That movie owns. The secluded, sexually banal, egotistical high muckity mucks of the future get their asses handed to them after it get s shot. A giant floating head that spits guns. Optical crystal computer AIs. Sean Connery with a 70s mustache kicking much ass. An asylum of artificially aged insane immortals. What's not to like? Bah! Philistine.
How about The Time Machine? The Eloi thought everything was hunky-dory. And I agree with THX1138, Gattaca, and Rollerball. Even Total Recall.
We might not think those worlds were so swell, but the common person living in them was quite happy.
@The_Real_Loud_Yellow_Journalism: There is paradise, are traces of a Utopia, in both Acts 1 & 2 of Feminica - perhaps it moves through quickly textually speaking for its readers to have picked up on--alas, Writer's Fault~
MikeLikes.Whoopi
Out on a limb, but Dark City?
If Equilibrium gets in, surely? (christ, I hate that movie - gun-fu, my arse).
Out on a limb, mabye, but Dark City?
(false world, controlled by nasty folks with an agenda, populace unaware of what's going on, etc).
If Equilibrium gets in, that ought to (christ, I hate that film. gun-fu, my arse).
@Plague: Oh crap, I saw you guys play Spaceland around 1994. You were pretty awful.
Metropolis is probably the first and foremost cinematic use of this theme. The idyll pleasure gardens sitting high above the bleak machine world that makes it all operate.
Maybe it doesn't count as the narrative doesn't start subjectively within the pleasure gardens, though?
Star Trek, both TOS and the various other versions, has touched on the False Utopia time and time again. What I love is the ones where the crew is enjoying visiting the utopia until they find out that the penalty for some innocuous thing is DEATH.
@The_Real_Quiet_Desperation: I agree that all those things are awesome. However, some how that movie is far, far less than the sum of its parts.
Fahrenheit 451 should be included. No books to read, just the TV for everything. Hmmm, maybe Jenny will be on.
off topic but I have only recent seen "Logan's Run" and cannot exactly place the scene above.
Is it just me or does Jessica 6 look like she is slumming in a bland downmarket Korova Milk Bar?
+ Watch video
Want to read some wacko, scary stuff, click on the link in "The Giver" and read a couple of the articles in the fundamentalist website. Parts of one or two articles is about all anyone who isn't a complete lunatic can possibly stomach. Where these people come up with there ideas of what is natural and moral is beyond comprehension.
@danwaterhouse:
Nice one, smartass.
But that one was around in 1977.
So, unless you were in high school with me...
@I'm Waitin' for Dolemite: Its as they are going into the New You. Right before Farah Fawcett inexplicably shows up.
@danwaterhouse: At least their name was accurate.
The stupid Eloi went and ruined everything by fighting back. Now they have to earn a living. Hey, didn't the Non-Interference clause get violated on the original trek, when they found that Bal had been providing for his retarded utopians and Kirk decided that it wasn't "right." Save me from a do-gooder like Kirk. Did Logan's run the movie have anything to do with the book, aside from Sanctuary?
@Jeff-Minor: The original Trek violated Brannagan's law every other episode.
Speaking of False Utopias and movies that appeared on MST 3K, what about "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank"?
@B: Is that the same genre as "Overblown at the Celluloid Dispensary"?
What about Stepford in "The Stepford Wives"?