Tuesday 15 November 2016

Arrival is food for the mind and heart.

I was underwhelmed by Denis Villeneuve’s Prisoners (2013)  Despite impressive performances I thought it really took itself far too seriously.  Sicario (2015) impressed me much more – but again I was not sure what it’s moral pov was.  It seems that Villeneuve wasn’t sure either. He is quoted as saying that ‘Sicario  about the alienation of the cycles of violence, how at one point we are in those spirals of violence and ask ourselves, 'Is there a solution?' My movie raises the question; it doesn't give any answer. (IMDb)  But his new film Arrival engaged my mind and moved my heart.

This movie tackles the well worked theme of first alien contact, but does so in a remarkable and original way.   It avoids the lazy shortcuts taken by so many sf books and films (the Carl Sagan inspired Contact excepted)  of gifting our extra-terrestrial visitors with our language.    Way back in the 1960s’ SETI (the Search for Extra-terrestrial Intelligence and NASA commissioned John B. Lilly to find out how to communicate with an alien mind - using dolphins as his research field.    So in Arrivals our unlikely – and sensibly chosen -  lead researcher is a linguistic expert, Doctor Louise Banks (Amy Adams.)  She has a physicist as a colleague in case math’s is a basis for communication – as on the plaque of Voyager.    But it is Louise who takes the lead, trying to find a common vocabulary to discover the visitor’s intentions.

The first words of the movie can actually alert us to the fact that this movie is about time;  beginnings and endings.  Language, our language, is also about  beginnings and endings.     You may have come across text in which the order of the letters of each word are jumbled, but as long as the first and last letters are correct our minds sorts out the rest almost instantaneously.   But what if the record of a language was not about alphabetical sequences?    Asian ideograms work in a different way, presenting the whole idea in one image (I wonder if dyslexia is a problem for those who read Chinese). 

But if a picture is worth a thousand words, and even a thousand words could not in fact communicate the reality of a reasonably complex picture, how might that language work , not only in practice but in and on our minds?     Arrival follows Chomsky’s notion that language shapes our thinking even more than our thinking shapes our language.    A radically different kind of language might radically change not only our thinking but how our minds work. 

And so we come back to the concept of time.  Physicists, it seems, have no way of fitting the concept of ‘now’ into their work.  In Rudolf Carnap’s Autobiography he  recounted a conversation with Albert Einstein in which  “Einstein said that the problem of the now worried him seriously.   He explained that the experience of the now means something special for man, something essentially different from the past or the future, but that this important difference cannot and does not occur within physics.  That this experience cannot be grasped by science seemed to him a matter of painful but inevitable resignation.”  ( The Philosophy of Rudolf Carnap, Chicago; Library of Living Philosophers, 1963).

It has been suggested that the ‘flow of time’ from now to now is simply a construct of the mind.   We receive so much information via our senses that we need filters in order to focus.  We  ‘deaf out’ the many voices in a restaurant in order to hear the one person we are paying attention too.  Maybe we cannot cope with any overload of information unless it is parceled into packets of time, a series of ‘nows’.     What if they are all happening at the same time?   Could we cope?     This filtering could shape our experience of time.   But if, as Einstein believed,  the fact of now cannot and does not occur within physics  then maybe a language that imparted huge amounts of information in one instant, rather than in sequential parcels, could reshape the receiving mind, and allow time itself to be experienced differently.

Most of this lied under the surface of Arrivals, but not far below.   Ted Chiang, who wrote the source Story of Your Life, is a professional physicist, but it seems that like Carl Sagan he was a deep interest in humanity.    It has often been said that sf is never ultimately about aliens, but about ourselves.   So this story has a human being at  its heart.    And she is truly brave.  Politicians and members of the Military  are governed by fear; fear of any failure that could cost careers or lives.  But true scientists are not afraid of failure.    Every failure is a learning experience.   When the politicians and military are pulling back – or wanting to attack -  Louise is willing to go forward, to expose herself and reach out.   Later, much later, we discover that there is another  dimension to her courage – remembering that the word’s root is coeur, the heart. 

So what about the sf hardware?   There is a ship, in fact 12 identical ships arrive and hover over seemingly random points around the globe.   They are beautiful in their simplicity and seem to be hewn from raw rock rather that molded from polished metal.     The fact that they may come from another dimension is suggested by the way gravity behaves rather differently within them.    (String theory suggests the possibility of 11 other space-time dimensions – space Time dimensions).  

The aliens themselves are properly alien.   They might not challenge the radical alien-ness of those in China Mieville’s wonderful novels (his creatures are philosophically as well as physically utterly different), but they will certainly do. 
And of course their difference is shown, crucially, in their written form.

And so at last to the actors.    In Sicario Villeneuve cast Emily Blunt in the lead role.  Here he cast Amy Adams.     These are two highly versatile and gifted actors.  Consider Emily in Edge of Tomorrow (aka Live Die Repeat) and The Girl on the Train.   Consider Amy in American Hustle and Enchanted.    Here Amy underplays so well that under her undemonstrative surface we see so much.    She is the still centre of the storm,  and we understand why  Jeremy Renner’s character, the physicist Ian Donnelly, stands back to let her lead.    Michael Stuhlbarg and Forest Whitaker have rather under developed roles as the leaders of the CIA and military on site, and do their best. 

Eric Heisserer  wrote the script from Chiang’s story, and it is clean.   Rather a change from his usual horror fare.

Bradford Young’s cinematographer’s pallet is suitably subdued (He also filmed Selma and A Most Violent Year. )

Johann Johannsson wrote the score (as he did for Prisoners, Sicario and The Theory of Everything)  and it suits both the visual and emotional content.


In the end we find out that this is not your standard SF movie, it is not about a hostile alien invasion – or even the Close Encounter’s benignity.   We have been expertly misled, and the reveal carries a heavy punch to the heart.  Like a good detective story we had been given all the clues, in fact the biggest clue came right at the start.   But while we are being led along our way we are exposed to some heavy duty theory presented cleanly and patronizingly.    This is good  hard-core sf, and then more.  Much more.