%0 Journal Article %A Weik von Mossner, Alexa %T Afraid of the dark and the light: visceralizing ecocide in "The Road" and "Hell" %D 2012 %@ 2171-9594 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10017/20421 %X The essay is concerned with the ways in which contemporary science fiction films explore the future subjectivities and societies that may result from radical ecological changes, looking at two pertinent examples from two different national traditions: John Hillcoat’s 2009 film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize - win ning novel The Road (2006), and one of the very few German - Swiss science fiction films with an environmen tal theme, Tim Fehlbaum’s Hell (2011). It is particularly interested in the relationship between the films’ imagined ecological spaces and the actions of the protagonists of each film on the one hand, and in the relationship between these futuristic dieget ic spaces and the contemporary real - life ecological spaces that “play” them on the other hand. Together with the performances of the human actors and the tension and suspense built by the narratives, it argues, the spectacle and insinuated agency of these ecological spaces are centrally responsible for the films’ emotional force and for their ability to engage viewers in stories of global ecocide and human survival. %K science fiction film %K ecocide %K setting %K landscape %K non-human agency %K viewer engagement %K película de ciencia ficción %K ecocidio %K escenario %K paisaje %K agencia no-humana %K implicación de la audiencia %K Literatura %K Literature %K Medio ambiente %K Environmental science %~ Biblioteca Universidad de Alcala