Tag Archive: High-Rise


HIGH RISE directed by Ben Wheatley (UK, 2015)

high_rise_2014_film_posterIf this movie had met with universal critical acclaim or had achieved commercial success it would almost certainly have denoted its failure in artistic terms. Fortunately, therefore, it polarized the press and bombed at the box office.

J.G. Ballard’s novel (published in 1975) was meant as a morbid, provocative slice of entertainment designed to leave readers absorbed but seriously spooked. It begins arrestingly: “Later, as he sat on his balcony eating the dog, Doctor Robert Laing reflected on the unusual events that had taken place within this huge apartment building during the previous three months”.

This big screen adaptation has a similarly jarring impact since, in Ben Wheatley, we have a director whose mindset is every bit as warped as the polite but misanthropic English writer. Continue reading

As a trainee doctor J.G. Ballard used to dissect cadavers and his view was that this same clinical eye was also key to his fiction. “Novelists should be like scientists” he declared and in cutting through the surface of apparently respectable society he exposed truths most writers choose to shy away from.

His awareness of the fine line dividing order and chaos derived from Ballard’s experiences in Shanghai during the Second World War which taught him that “nothing is secure as we like to think it is”.

In his 1975 novel, High-Rise he dispassionately charts the breakdown of a fragile order in a 40 storey tower block containing 1000 apartments and 2000 tenants,:  “Life in the high-rise had begun to resemble the world outside – there were the same ruthlessness and aggression concealed within a set of polite conventions”.

Gradually any lingering normality erodes as humans regress to an animal-like state driven by the raw desire for food, security and sex. Continue reading