Popular Culture Review Vol. 20, No. 1, Winter 2009 | Page 73

Return of the Patriarchs 69 The film version of Voyage to the Bottom o f the Sea follows the adventures of the Seaview, a nuclear submarine designed and commanded by Admiral Harriman Nelson (Walter Pidgeon). Nelson is depicted as a somewhat cranky patriarch: brilliant but irascible, inflexible but usually right. One of the sub-plots of the film concerns whether or not Nelson is in his right mind; a visiting female psychologist, Dr. Hiller (Joan Fontaine) almost convinces Nelson’s second in command (and surrogate son) Captain Crane (Robert Sterling) to relieve him of duty. In the end, the psychologist is revealed to be a saboteur, and Nelson is validated as not only sane, but visionary. The main plot of Voyage to the Bottom o f the Sea is typical Irwin Allen disaster fare: the Van Allen radiation belt has caught fire, causing rapid global warming and catastrophic weather conditions. A French scientist thinks the belt will bum itself out, but Admiral Nelson calculates that the belt can be exploded outward from the Earth’s atmosphere by a strategic nuclear missile strike. The principal action of the film concerns the Seaview’s efforts to reach the right coordinates at the right time to launch the missile. On the way, Nelson’s efforts to save the world are hampered by giant squids, undersea mines, United Nations interference, the threat of mutiny, bizarre weather conditions, sabotage, and, finally, religious fanaticism. The religious fanatic in question is one Miguel Alvarez (Michael Ansara), a civilian rescued from a melting ice floe at the beginning of the picture. The only non-Anglo in the bunch, and the only character in the film to espouse a religious viewpoint, Alvarez views the combustion of the Van Allen radiation belt in apocalyptic terms. If the sky is on fire, it must be God’s will that mankind perish. After maintaining a passive and fatalistic philosophical stance for the balance of the film, in the final minutes Alvarez tries to delay the missile launch in order to serve God’s will. Nelson responds with an appeal to reason. Alvarez: God’s will is written across the heavens! Nelson: Alvarez, are you saying that man must accept destruction even though it’s in his power to avert it? Alvarez: It’s not for us to judge, Admiral! Nelson: Not judge, maybe, but we can reason! If God ordains that man should die without a fight, then why does he give us the will to live? By itself, Voyage to the Bottom o f the Sea proves little, but it exemplifies a strand in American thought and cultural production that we could call Postwar Humanism. Following World War II, in order to distinguish American government from totalitarian regimes right and left (Fascist and Communist), American culture trumpeted the virtues of individualism. What kept this vigorous individualism from devolving into selfish or arbitrary behavior was an insistence that it be seen in an Enlightenment context: individual liberties and personal perspectives had to be related to values and standards of reason, compassion, and justice that were external to the individual. Postwar Humanism