Just putting together a listing of cinema and TV that have at least something to do with a culture of fear – and perhaps in some more recent cases either comment directly on paranoia and security – or in others contribute to an overall social unease. My curiosity is NOT just with representations of surveillance in Hollywood film – like the use of (fake) CCTV footage within their narratives, BUT the way their premise is developing a rhetorics of surveillance and paranoia. An obvious reference would be Thomas Y. Levin – his thoughts on contemporary Hollywood and its fascination with imag(in)ing video surveillance. a good reference: Black, J. (2002) The Reality Effect: Film Culture and the Graphic Imperative, NYTHE FILMS. Also Video Surveillance in Hollywood Movies, Dietmar Kammerer
- Tony Scott – Enemy of the State
- Steven Spielberg – Minority Report
- and the cheezy – Panic Room – David Fincher
- Time Code (2000) Mike Figgis: very much about surveillance
- Rope (of course) Hitchcock
- The Conversation – (1974) Coppola with Gean Hackney
- Enemy of the State (1998)
- The Truman Show (1998) – Peter Weir
- Wag The Dog (1997) Benny Levinson
- Snake Eyes – DePalma (1998?)
- Sliver – (1993) Philip Noyce
- Menace to Society (1 & II) – Hughes (1992??)
- Call Northside 777 (1948) Hathaway
- Manchurian Candidate (original & remake)
- Seven days in May – with good old burt lancaster
- Elephant – fantastic – on the HS shootings
- Blow Up, Michelangelo Antonioni — YES – weirdly engaging scene in the park
- Chelsea Girls, Andy Warhol (1966) – maybe
- I Thought I Saw Prisoners, Harun Farocki (2000) – powerful
- Lost Highway, David Lynch – can’t leave that one out
thats all for now folks .. any contributions to the list are MOST welcome
