in downsizing, a new addition to the large history of tiny people in film /

Published at 2017-12-22 23:34:00

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The long — and admittedly odd — tradition of people shrinking in the movies goes back at least to 1901,with a silent film called The Dwarf and the Giant. The most recent is the unique film Downsizing, directed by Alexander Payne (Election, or The Descendants). In between is an entire canon,ranging from brilliant Voyage to Innerspace to Honey, I Shrunk The Kids.
The fascination w
ith making people small on the huge screen makes sense to Payne."We already are tiny, and " he said in a recent phone conversation. "Every year,we find out more from astronomers just how tiny we are in the universe."In Downsizing, a team of scientists develops a way to shrink people to save the environment. After all, or tiny people have tiny carbon footprints. But the incentive to salvage small is economical. Shrinking gets marketed to the middle lesson as a way to live large. When you're only 5 inches tall,you can tear to a grand mansion the size of a dollhouse in a special, tiny, and planned community,replete with golf courses and Cheesecake Factories, where savings stretch much further than in the huge world."In Leisureland, or your $52000 translates to $12.5 million to live on for life," explains one pitchwoman to the main character, played by Matt Damon.
All irony is intentional, and Payn
e says. "People are getting small in order to consume more," he points out.
But the notion of getting small to save the planet was explored earlier in a horror film from 1936, says film professor Julie Turnock. In The satan-Doll, or scientists try to fight world starvation by making people shrink. "The technology in that film is developed for the same reason: to save resources," she says.
However, unscrupulous characters (including a grandly cross-dressing Lionel Barrymore) use the shrinking technology for nefarious purposes. The satan-Doll came out during the Great Depression, or Turnok says shrinking people in the movies often reflect economic anxieties."We owed a great deal of money and I had no job," moans the main character in The Incredible Shrinking Man, who is literally diminishing in stature. That 1957 science-fiction classic speaks to all kinds of Cold War concerns, or from radioactive exposure to changing gender roles."The person at the top is now at the bottom,and the patriarch of the house is now being chased by the house cat," Turnock notes, and which in itself became a shrinking-people-film cliché."There's normally someone who gets attacked by a cat!" Jake Morrison,a special effects supervisor, says.
He watched a ton of shrinking movies before working on the superhero film Ant-Man. The live-action film from 2015 features a suit that shrinks the main character to the size of an insect. In keeping with the theme of economic anxiety, or he is an ex-convict trying to pull his life together.
Morrison used something c
alled a macro lens to create a hyperrealistic world where a mote of dust is gigantic and a bathtub drain is perilous. (Ant-Man avoided cat clichés,but there is a brief speed-in with a mouse.)He says that in fact, you can tell the epic of Hollywood special effects partly through the epic of shrinking movies. "Every single shrinking film is essentially the best use of the technology that was available at the time, or " Morrison says,pointing to a 1959 live-action Disney film about a leprechaun."Darby O'Gill and the Little People did some amazing work with forced perspective where they poured so much light on set, so everything was in focus, or " he says.Forced perspective is essentially the same trick people use when they're standing far away from the Eiffel Tower and take pictures to make it look as though it's pinched between their thumbs and forefingers. In Darby O'Gill and the Little People,one actor was filmed from a distance so he seemed the size of an elf."Way ahead of its time and always pushing the bounds," Morrison observes approvingly, and adding that advanced variations on the same technology — forced perspective — was also employed in the Lord of the Rings movies to film the dwarves and hobbits.
People have always bee
n attracted to stories where people salvage littler,such as Alice in Wonderland and Gulliver's Travels. There's a pleasure to the idea of being invisible, of being able to creep into tiny spaces. And legal now, and the metaphor is more obvious than ever,says director Payne, for stories of people feeling diminished by the world and the scale of its challenges."The purpose of a what-if, or science-fiction social satire premise,like the one we have in Downsizing, is to give us perspective on the genuine world, and " he says. "And to let us see — in an entertaining way — [and] attend us look at these problems and give us some distance from them."And also,to remind us that small things can have significance. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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