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"Arrival" the movie (1 Viewer)

It's as good as the reviews say.

9.5/10

Wouldn't change one beat.
IMO the Renner voiceover 1/2 way through the movie that made it seem like we were watching a BBC documentary for a few minutes really felt out of place and was something I didn't dig. 

 
  It felt like it wanted to be Contact but Contact did a lot of this way better.  I'm not sure what anyone is seeing in the acting.  None of the actors were even asked to show a range of emotions.  Hawkeye and the general were almost emotionless.  Amy Adams really didn't sell me on the anguish of what she was going thru compared to what other actors might have done.  She showed more emotion on the phone at the end than with anything regarding her daughter which was weird.  
I'm 100% with you.  Contact is one of my all-time faves.  I thought the acting was pretty average at best in this latest flick. 

 
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So the heptapods' purpose was to give humans the "tool" to communicate and be unified peacefully?

:oldunsure:

 
I heard it got amazing reviews and A great Rotten tomato score so I was pumped to see it.

Not a huge fan. The inner linguist in me enjoyed it, but the sci-fi nerd in me didn't.

To be honest, it made such a small impression that I don't think I've even thought about the movie once in the 3 days since I've seen it. 

The twist was cool, I followed the whole thing, and even helped explain what happened to some of those I watched it with. 

But overall..a forgettable movie.
Saw it last Friday and have the same reaction. It was OK, and have not thought about it since.  

 
Did they also explain

how Louise knew her future (flashbacks/dreams/memories)? Was that a power from the aliens as well?
I really did watch the movie, I swear I did. But sometimes the characters mumble and I miss stuff.

 
Did they also explain

how Louise knew her future (flashbacks/dreams/memories)? Was that a power from the aliens as well?
I really did watch the movie, I swear I did. But sometimes the characters mumble and I miss stuff.

It was said somewhere in the movie that as you learn a language, your brain rewires a little and you start to think a different way because of it - even dreaming in the new language,etc.. So since the alien language is the way it is, you started to think like they did as you learn it (I guess in a multi-dimensional way where time is not linear, hence they know they will need our help in 3000 years), so she started dreaming in the language and the future was bleeding into the present for her.
 
Saw two movies recently.  Arrival, and the new Independence Day.

Two, um, different kinds of alien movies.  Gotta give this one the nod pretty handily.  ID2 was horrible.  Arrival was excellent. 

A lot of things were open to at least a little bit of interpretation. Really, really good movie. 

 
Have heard critics say that Adams is selfish for going through with the pregnancy.  Not only to the daughter but to Renner.  Don't want to argue that.  Just want clarification on something.  Isn't Adams still experiencing her relationship with her daughter?  Isn't the daughter still alive in Adams' past?  I was under the impression the past and future are all as "alive" as the present.
 
It was said somewhere in the movie that as you learn a language, your brain rewires a little and you start to think a different way because of it - even dreaming in the new language,etc.. So since the alien language is the way it is, you started to think like they did as you learn it (I guess in a multi-dimensional way where time is not linear, hence they know they will need our help in 3000 years), so she started dreaming in the language and the future was bleeding into the present for her.
Didn't the flashbacks start before she even even knew they arrived?  

 
I heard it got amazing reviews and A great Rotten tomato score so I was pumped to see it.

Not a huge fan. The inner linguist in me enjoyed it, but the sci-fi nerd in me didn't.

To be honest, it made such a small impression that I don't think I've even thought about the movie once in the 3 days since I've seen it. 

The twist was cool, I followed the whole thing, and even helped explain what happened to some of those I watched it with. 

But overall..a forgettable movie.
It comes across as a science-fiction movie written by a liberal arts major.   

 
I thought it was very good.  Not as amazing as reviews had me hoping, but still very enjoyable.  

My main gripe with it is there are some major plot holes / handwaving.  Like one minute she meets the aliens, says "human" and they draw a funny looking circle.  Then "yadda yadda yadda" she's basically fluent in their language.  How did that happen?  Would've liked more detail rather than just that oddly placed voiceover in the middle.  And how long did that take exactly?  Not sure if I missed it but was it days?  Weeks?  Months?
 
I thought it was very good.  Not as amazing as reviews had me hoping, but still very enjoyable.  

My main gripe with it is there are some major plot holes / handwaving.  Like one minute she meets the aliens, says "human" and they draw a funny looking circle.  Then "yadda yadda yadda" she's basically fluent in their language.  How did that happen?  Would've liked more detail rather than just that oddly placed voiceover in the middle.  And how long did that take exactly?  Not sure if I missed it but was it days?  Weeks?  Months?

It was weeks. I think 30 days was mentioned in the voiceover.
 
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Have heard critics say that Adams is selfish for going through with the pregnancy.  Not only to the daughter but to Renner.  Don't want to argue that.  Just want clarification on something.  Isn't Adams still experiencing her relationship with her daughter?  Isn't the daughter still alive in Adams' past?  I was under the impression the past and future are all as "alive" as the present.
Good point. But I took it that the flash forwards felt like memories. And we all have those regarding the past. As for the selfishness, it's unclear to me whether there is really a choice. But assuming it's a choice, I think the question of whether she made the right choice is an interesting discussion.
 
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  It felt like it wanted to be Contact but Contact did a lot of this way better.  I'm not sure what anyone is seeing in the acting.  None of the actors were even asked to show a range of emotions.  Hawkeye and the general were almost emotionless.  Amy Adams really didn't sell me on the anguish of what she was going thru compared to what other actors might have done.  She showed more emotion on the phone at the end than with anything regarding her daughter which was weird.  
Nah, Contact was undone by the silly romance subplot between Foster and McConnaughey, who had ZERO chemistry on screen.  Also, Contact lost all momentum when they finally got the machine to work - The third act was an utter mess.  Arrival was solidly written from start to finish and is a far better movie IMO.

 
An excerpt from a good article discussing how the source material (Chiang's short story) informs the theme of the movie:

In the story, there is no military tension, no setting up of China or Russia as aggressors, and no misguided American soldiers sabotaging the spaceship that landed in America. Story of Your Life is entirely focused on Louise’s rewired perception of her own life, and her pivotal choice to have a daughter despite the pain she knows it will cause. The reveal — that Louise has seen her daughter’s future — is not a surprise sci-fi twist, but a slow and steady realization. Even Chiang’s title has an obvious double meaning almost from the get-go, the pronoun “your” belonging both to Louise’s daughter and the idea that we as humans are made of our memories and defined by our choices.

This message exists in Arrival, but it’s hidden under broader plot movements, big drama, and more visible Hollywood layers. Chiang limits the scope of Story of Your Life to a reflection on personal choice. He says foreseeing a choice and then making it is not the cruelty of fate in action, but a powerful exercise in free will.

Viewers are already theorizing about the film’s plot, and whether it means that humans who learn the heptapod language can alter their own futures. Whether Louise can change anything is besides the point. In Arrival’s deterministic universe, free will exists in the form of following through on a choice you already know you’ll make. In effect, by choosing not to alter the future, you’re creating it, and actively affirming it.

“The heptapods are neither free nor bound as we understand those concepts; they don’t act according to their will, nor are they helpless automatons,” Louise says in Chiang’s story. “What distinguishes the heptapods’ mode of awareness is not just that their actions coincide with history’s events; it is also that their motives coincide with history’s purposes. They act to create the future, to enact chronology.”

Underneath the technical complexity of the explanation is a profound truth Chiang is communicating — and one Arrival similarly hammers home. “What if the experience of knowing the future changed a person?” Louise ponders. “What if it evoked a sense of urgency, a sense of obligation to act precisely as she knew she would?” And it is precisely because Louise understands what it will be like to lose her daughter that she chooses to bring her into the world nonetheless.

Readers aren’t necessarily supposed to agree with Louise’s choice. (Some of our own writers don’t.) But Arrival isn’t about time travel. It’s also not a commentary on gene-modification, abortion, or any other hot-button topic about using our foresight into the future to force our present path to diverge. It’s about acceptance, understanding our life’s choices, and living as if any one moment were as valuable or meaningful as the next.

The film suggests that knowing what will happen in the future doesn’t diminish the meaning behind a choice you’ll make today. On the contrary, it says every choice you do make can be made knowing it will actively shape what’s to come. As Emerson once wrote, life's a journey, not a destination. In the circular, non-linear minds of Arrival’s aliens and Louise Banks, the destination doesn’t even exist.

Instead of treating that message like a superpower to acquire, the film delivers it as a subtle worldview. Hidden under Arrival’s more palatable themes about overcoming cultural differences and uniting as one species is Chiang’s more direct message about learning how to appreciate life’s moments, to live outside the bounds of time.

If we could see our lives laid out before us, would we change anything? Story of Your Life — and by extension Arrival — is telling us to live as if the answer is, and always will be, a resolute no.
 
One more question:

what was the purpose of the bird in the cage? Was it to keep the humans spacialy oriented while inside the spacecraft?
 
One more question:

what was the purpose of the bird in the cage? Was it to keep the humans spacialy oriented while inside the spacecraft?

It was the "canary in a coalmine" serving to let the humans know that air was breathable, etc..
 
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Saw again last night with my wife.  Maybe better second time around. Best movie I've seen in years.  Should win tons of awards 

 
jon_mx said:
The sci-fi part is almost irrelevant to the story.  It is more centered around ethics, language, philosophy, politics. 
Isn't that what good science fiction is normally about?

 
Have heard critics say that Adams is selfish for going through with the pregnancy.  Not only to the daughter but to Renner.  Don't want to argue that.  Just want clarification on something.  Isn't Adams still experiencing her relationship with her daughter?  Isn't the daughter still alive in Adams' past?  I was under the impression the past and future are all as "alive" as the present.
Seems like a very strange things for "critics" to bag on.

Also, is anyone reading this far into a thread about a movie and not actually seen the movie??  If so, you deserve to read spoilers. 

 
Seems like a very strange things for "critics" to bag on.

Also, is anyone reading this far into a thread about a movie and not actually seen the movie??  If so, you deserve to read spoilers. 
Critics a poor choice of words on my part.  Better said those debating the moral implications of Adams choice to still have her daughter.  A large % of those in the discussion seemed to think Adams was being selfish.  That surprised me.  

 

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