Architecture in Cinema

The Man Who Fell to Earth

Author(s): Hikmet Temel Akarsu * .

Pp: 165-169 (5)

DOI: 10.2174/9789815223316124010021

* (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

 The Man Who Fell on Earth, directed by Nicolas Roeg in 1976 and starring David Bowie, is an influential dystopia film on emotional episodes. Although the images seem to be about the world we live in, the story in its essence is based on aliens characterized through sublimation. The plot is briefly as follows: Aliens belonging to a planet that has exhausted the world they live in need water to survive. Leaving behind the last few surviving family members, the alien figure Thomas Jerome Newton (David Bowie) comes to Earth, a planet with plenty of water, to find a solution. His vehicle is damaged during the descent and is unable to take off again.

Thomas Jerome Newton (David Bowie) in this, that is, our beautiful world with abundant water, wonderful nature, and endless possibilities, tries to seem like a normal person by camouflaging his real appearance and trying to find methods to send water to his own planet in order to save his family as soon as possible. Using his alien knowledge and technology, he obtains many patents and soon earns a large amount of money, under the astonishing, greedy, and lustful gaze of his lawyers and advisors.

However, the wealth he gained unexpectedly in a short time and through successful patents attracts the attention not only of the state but also of many other intriguing and mischievous circles. Evil people who want to seize Thomas Jerome Newton's fortune meanwhile destroy his chance to return to save his family as well.

A sustainable world and environment, green, organic architecture, environmentally compatible buildings, conservation of natural water resources, energy-efficient buildings, designs that consider carbon dioxide emissions, smart buildings, landscape, etc. , are the concepts that have settled into the focal point of architecture and have become significant after the 21st century. Although the movie “The Man Who Fell to Earth” was produced in 1976, it owes its worth to the fact that it introduces an early awareness of the agenda of this field in an indirect fashion.

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