ARRIVAL
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: Twelve alien craft land at apparently random
locations on the Earth's surface. This creates a
dangerous situation that could lead to a third world
war. A linguist and a physicist are more or less
drafted to head up a team trying to find why these
apparently alien craft are here. Amy Adams gives a
compelling performance as a woman trying to break the
most important and also one of the most difficult
puzzles in human history. Denis Villeneuve directs a
screenplay by Eroc Heisserer based on a story by Ted
Chiang. This is probably the best science fiction
film of 2016. Rating: low +3 (-4 to +4) or 8/10
One of my top ten films of last year (actually #4 on my list) was
SICARIO, directed by the-to-me unfamiliar Denis Villeneuve. I made
a mental note to pay more attention to his films. But I did not
need to bother. This year he is back with a much larger calling
card. At a time when we have been getting some really good science
fiction films Villeneuve has managed to have a stand out work of
science fiction cinema. At one time written science fiction
frequently would look at the theme of first contact with alien
beings and the effort to understand aliens. Frequently these
stories broke down assuming aliens were just like humans except
they had funny accents or unpronounceable names. ARRIVAL is one of
the rare films that has suitably alien aliens and generates a real
sense of the incomprehensibility of an alien species.
Dr. Louise Banks (played with subtlety by Amy Adams) is a
linguistics professor who had done some work to help the military,
work she later regretted. She is at first annoyed when a news
story interrupts one of her lectures. It seems that twelve huge
spacecraft of unknown origin have each chosen an arbitrary place on
the Earth's surface and is hovering just a few dozen feet in the
air.
Army Colonel Weber (Forest Whitaker) had been impressed with Banks
in the past and asks her for a small favor. Could she please be
one of the two people making the first contact with
extraterrestrials and at the same time head up the effort to
communicate with them? How could anybody refuse such a request?
Jeremy Renner plays theoretical physicist Ian Donnelly, the other
half of the communications team. Together they visit the strange
inside of an alien craft and will be attempting to understand
whatever they find. All the while the international political
atmosphere is supercharged with the uncertainly of just what will
the intervention of aliens do to destabilize the political climate.
One has only to look at INDEPENDENCE DAY to see that this could
lead to a slam-bang action story, but instead Villeneuve gives us a
serious thought piece, part puzzle for the characters, part puzzle
for the viewer, part philosophical introspection, part imaginative
look at the nature of time. While the build is slow, ARRIVAL is
full of a cerebral tension. The alien is believably alien and the
alien language puzzle is made nearly comprehensible. The real
enemy is not someone with a gun but the unknown that has to be
overcome.
There was a time when science fiction films were about flying
saucers or giant insects. Or they might have flying saucers come
to Earth, but then we would be treated to rays that vaporize
artillery and possibly soldiers with it. There are some battles in
ARRIVAL but the aliens are not participating and the fighting is
kept off-screen. The film's thrills are all more cerebral and a
sign that science fiction films are maturing.
ARRIVAL is based on a sophisticated story by respected contemporary
science fiction author Ted Chiang. While the film is not entirely
faithful to the Chiang it is told on a level matching that of the
story. It is a story aimed at an adult and intelligent audience
featuring an adult and intelligent performance from Adams and
Renner. ARRIVAL expects a lot from its audience at the same time
it is giving more. I rate ARRIVAL a low +3 on the -4 to +4 scale
or 8/10.
Film Credits:
<
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2543164/combined>
What others are saying:
<
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/arrival_2016>
Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2016 Mark R. Leeper
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