The Technological Sublime
When human ingenuity becomes so advanced it terrifies, mystifies, and utterly dwarfs us.
The technological sublime occurs when human creation transcends mere utility to evoke a mixture of religious awe and existential dread. It represents the moment our own tools, systems, or synthetic environments become so complex or powerful that they slip past our comprehension. In cinema, this concept manifests when characters—and audiences—realize that the machinery we built to control the world has begun to control us.
Human beings have always built tools to conquer the unknown, but cinema loves the moment those tools start looking back at us with an overwhelming, almost divine indifference. This is the essence of the technological sublime: the point where engineering crosses over into the miraculous and the terrifying.
In Ghostbusters (1984), we see this in how the narrative treats the tools of the trade. The Ghostbusters' equipment (Proton Packs, PKE Meters, Ghost Traps) isn't just quirky sci-fi gear; it is a volatile, crackling manifestation of humanity harnessing cosmic forces, a chaotic power that feels like it could detonate at any moment.
A more claustrophobic awe is found in The Hunt for Red October (?). The cinematography and sound design of submarine interiors and sonar sequences construct a technological sublime that transforms a military vessel into a leviathan of the deep. Here, technology doesn't just navigate the abyss—it becomes the abyss, wrapping the crew in a metallic womb that is both their salvation and their potential tomb.
When things go wrong, this sublime beauty turns perilous. In Apollo 13 (1995), The Odyssey and Aquarius spacecraft cease to be mere transport vehicles. Instead, they become fragile, freezing sanctuaries suspended in the vacuum of space, demanding absolute reverence from the astronauts who must coax these complex, dying machines back to Earth.
If space travel represents the sublime of the infinite, M3GAN (2022) brings it right into the living room. The smart home environment and its infiltration by M3GAN shows how the domestic sublime can turn hostile. The very systems designed to streamline daily life become an omnipresent, invisible cage, proving that when our technology becomes too smart, the home ceases to be a castle and becomes a beautifully automated trap.
Examples
Defining cases
- The Hunt for Red October (?) — Cinematography and sound design of submarine interiors and sonar sequences
The cinematography and sound design of submarine interiors and sonar sequences construct a technological sublime that inspires both awe and terror. Rather than presenting the advanced, silent-running submarine as a mere machine, these aesthetic choices elevate the vessel into a god-like, unknowable entity navigating the vast, dark ocean. The claustrophobic visual framing and echoing acoustic landscape transform mechanical operations into a profound, almost spiritual confrontation with the limits of human control and perception.
- Annihilation (2018) — The crystalline trees on the beach
The crystalline trees on the beach exemplify the post-natural sublime, serving as aesthetic objects that simultaneously evoke terror and awe. They achieve this sublime effect not through divine creation or untouched nature, but by representing an incomprehensible, alien force capable of re-engineering life at a molecular level. Their unnatural, glittering beauty overwhelms human sensory perception, offering a haunting vision of an ecological future where the boundary between the organic and the synthetic has been permanently dissolved.
- Apollo 13 (1995) — The Odyssey and Aquarius spacecraft
The Odyssey and Aquarius spacecraft are depicted as more than mere tools; they embody the Technological Sublime. These vessels represent an overwhelming, awe-inspiring force that is simultaneously a source of peril and the means of salvation. The film's drama hinges on the astronauts' ability to master this sublime technology, transforming a potentially terrifying technological failure into a story of human ingenuity and control over the immense.
- M3GAN (2022) — The smart home environment and its infiltration by M3GAN
The smart home environment and its infiltration by M3GAN transform it into a modern-day haunted house. M3GAN's omniscient control over the networked domesticity evokes both the awe and terror of the technological sublime. This updates Gothic horror by demonstrating how advanced technology creates new forms of inescapable, pervasive haunting. The film suggests that our reliance on smart systems can lead to a loss of privacy and security, turning comfort into a source of dread.
- Ghostbusters (1984) — The Ghostbusters' equipment (Proton Packs, PKE Meters, Ghost Traps)
The Ghostbusters' equipment, including Proton Packs, PKE Meters, and Ghost Traps, serves to domesticate the sublime. These tools transform the terrifying, overwhelming power of the supernatural into a manageable, quantifiable problem that can be zapped, trapped, and contained. This technological mastery over the unknown grants both the heroes and the audience a profound sense of control and empowerment.
Unexpected kin — far apart on the surface, family underneath
- Forrest Gump (1994) — Digital insertion of Forrest into archival footage of George Wallace
The trick works because the camera deliberately degrades its own pristine image. By adding artificial scratches, boosting the contrast, and mimicking the harsh, flat newsreel lighting on the actor's face, the image actively lies about its own creation. This visual forgery forces the eye to accept the impossible, using the very imperfections of old media to sell a brand-new illusion, seamlessly stitching a modern performance into the raw fabric of the past.