6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Buried within The Message from Vega The Message from Sagan., 29 October 2005
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"Close Encounters of the Third Kind" needed updating. "Contact" is that
update. Though it may never attain the lofty heights of commercialism
that "Close Encounters" enjoyed, "Contact" is, in fact, a more
intelligent vision of extra-terrestrial communication with our
outer-spiral-arm planet.
From science maven Carl Sagan's optimistic novel of the same name, the
movie is based on the ideology of the Drake Equation (the speculative
theory postulating multitudes of Life-harboring planets in this galaxy,
given the sheer quantity of possibly habitable worlds), defined in the
movie by the almost-too-cute syllogism: "If we are alone in the
Universe, it sure seems like an awful waste of space." The Drake
Equation is weighed against the Fermi Paradox, which argues that if
there *are* alien civilizations, why haven't we detected them yet? This
movie's plot obviously - negates that paradox.
Whereas "Close Encounters"' method of alien contact played on the
age-worn industrial-era concept of aliens physically visiting Earth, an
infinitely more efficient manner is effected in "Contact" by means of
radio waves. SETI astronomers, headed by Ellie Arroway
(perfect-featured Jodie Foster in sensual, leonine mane), stumble upon
distinctly intelligent radio signals originating near the star Vega. In
decoding The Message, they are astonished to find it is not merely a
rudimentary greeting, but rather a technologically-superior detailed
schematic for a Machine, to transport US to THEM.
Considering the economics of space travel not referring to 'money',
but expending 'energy' The Message defines the most judicious method
for establishing contact, whilst discerning whether a civilization is
ready and/or worthy to step up to an interstellar level of commerce.
The concept of "aliens" has matured in this film, from simple benign or
malignant humanoids (treating Earth as the retarded child of the
galaxy), to ambiguous "intelligences", regarding us as near-equals, in
placing the ball in our court.
This maturity is due in great part to the inexhaustible efforts of the
late Dr. Sagan, whose quest to bestow a sense of cerebral wonder in a
generation jaded by laser-wielding aliens and detestably non-scientific
"science fiction" found a culminating point in this movie.
With aliens being so apparently existent, there comes the inevitable
contention of Religion vs. Science, and though Sagan clarifies his
position in the novel, the movie must necessarily leave the issue
ambiguous to appeal to its demographic of (real or imagined)
"christians" the bulk of earth's popcorn-plucking populace. The film
ultimately "preaches to the converted" on BOTH sides. No Atheist or
Christian will be jumping their razor-wire fences on the grounds of
this movie.
As with all major-studio releases, the screen story tampers with the
novel's finer details, slotting it squarely within motion picture
dramatic parameters - most notably modifying the overweight evangelist
of the book, Palmer Joss, to that of Hollywood man-toy, Mathew
McConaughey, to give Ellie that seemingly necessary "love-interest".
Thankfully, the broad strokes retain enough of Sagan's driving pursuit
of knowledge, elevating it above mere whizbang alien-invasion fare.
Yet we do not lack for effects stunning, thought-provoking effects,
rather than "be-still-my-pants" jaw-droppers. The challenging opening
sequence sees a camera panning backwards through space away from earth,
beyond the edge of the Milky Way, outracing a jumble of radio static,
which gets progressively "older", the farther out we go (as indicated
by familiar tunes, news snippets and cultural signpost sounds - i.e.
the farther out in space you get, the farther back in time you hear; in
essence, time-traveling backwards - faster than light, no less, if you
are outpacing radio waves!). Herein lies the foreshadowing of the whole
plot. For those unfamiliar with the physics concept that underlines
this sequence, the movie will make no sense.
The visualization of The Machine (that The Message instructed to build)
was a marvel of utility and "alien" design, seamlessly integrated into
the landscape of Cape Canaveral. Most impressive was the tragic
sequence which destroyed the first Machine so artfully contrived,
with views from the scores of "media" cameras covering the event - that
the viewer never thinks to question where the reality ends and the
green-screen babble begins.
Though technically not a "special effect", an astounding camera trick
with a running girl in a mirror will have you scratching your head for
weeks as to how it was concocted - for directorial *aficionados*, this
sequence alone is worth the movie.
One can only hope that viewers can delve through the flummery (which
must necessarily blossom during the latter stages of the movie, as The
Machine traverses worm-holes) to the REAL "message" from Sagan: that
the questioning and scientific mind is infinitely more precious to our
species and creates more impetus for launching Mankind to the stars
than the stagnating minds of the pseudo-science shamsters, which
includes fanatical Christian contingents.
One of the best arguments against *religionistas* played out in the
movie by the ever-psycho Jake Busey - is that no scientist has yet
strapped himself with explosives and taken innocent lives in his quest
to force an opinionated Physics viewpoint on other people, whom he
believes he will "save" by blowing them up The incomparably-reliable
David Morse is Ellie's encouraging father, while William Fichtner
poignantly plays a blind astronomer colleague.
A stoic Tom Skerritt is simultaneously Ellie's supervisor and
adversary, although thankfully is not painted as "villainous", even
though cast as the obvious antagonist; an intelligent rendering,
keeping his interests "scientific" rather than petty. Although he does
prevaricate to score his Machine seat, he is noble enough to admit to
Ellie, "I wish we lived in a world which rewarded honesty like yours",
to which Ellie replies, "I thought the world is what we make of it."
Carl Sagan died before production was completed on "Contact", making it
one of his last gifts to a blinkered world. The film's dedication read
simply: "For Carl". I wept. Without him, the Universe seems like an
awful waste of space.
Watch it at Amazon
Buy it at Amazon Rent it at blockbuster.comDiscuss in Boards More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Contact (1997) More at IMDbPro »
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Buried within The Message from Vega The Message from Sagan., 29 October 2005
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"Close Encounters of the Third Kind" needed updating. "Contact" is that update. Though it may never attain the lofty heights of commercialism that "Close Encounters" enjoyed, "Contact" is, in fact, a more intelligent vision of extra-terrestrial communication with our outer-spiral-arm planet.
From science maven Carl Sagan's optimistic novel of the same name, the movie is based on the ideology of the Drake Equation (the speculative theory postulating multitudes of Life-harboring planets in this galaxy, given the sheer quantity of possibly habitable worlds), defined in the movie by the almost-too-cute syllogism: "If we are alone in the Universe, it sure seems like an awful waste of space." The Drake Equation is weighed against the Fermi Paradox, which argues that if there *are* alien civilizations, why haven't we detected them yet? This movie's plot obviously - negates that paradox.
Whereas "Close Encounters"' method of alien contact played on the age-worn industrial-era concept of aliens physically visiting Earth, an infinitely more efficient manner is effected in "Contact" by means of radio waves. SETI astronomers, headed by Ellie Arroway (perfect-featured Jodie Foster in sensual, leonine mane), stumble upon distinctly intelligent radio signals originating near the star Vega. In decoding The Message, they are astonished to find it is not merely a rudimentary greeting, but rather a technologically-superior detailed schematic for a Machine, to transport US to THEM.
Considering the economics of space travel not referring to 'money', but expending 'energy' The Message defines the most judicious method for establishing contact, whilst discerning whether a civilization is ready and/or worthy to step up to an interstellar level of commerce. The concept of "aliens" has matured in this film, from simple benign or malignant humanoids (treating Earth as the retarded child of the galaxy), to ambiguous "intelligences", regarding us as near-equals, in placing the ball in our court.
This maturity is due in great part to the inexhaustible efforts of the late Dr. Sagan, whose quest to bestow a sense of cerebral wonder in a generation jaded by laser-wielding aliens and detestably non-scientific "science fiction" found a culminating point in this movie.
With aliens being so apparently existent, there comes the inevitable contention of Religion vs. Science, and though Sagan clarifies his position in the novel, the movie must necessarily leave the issue ambiguous to appeal to its demographic of (real or imagined) "christians" the bulk of earth's popcorn-plucking populace. The film ultimately "preaches to the converted" on BOTH sides. No Atheist or Christian will be jumping their razor-wire fences on the grounds of this movie.
As with all major-studio releases, the screen story tampers with the novel's finer details, slotting it squarely within motion picture dramatic parameters - most notably modifying the overweight evangelist of the book, Palmer Joss, to that of Hollywood man-toy, Mathew McConaughey, to give Ellie that seemingly necessary "love-interest". Thankfully, the broad strokes retain enough of Sagan's driving pursuit of knowledge, elevating it above mere whizbang alien-invasion fare.
Yet we do not lack for effects stunning, thought-provoking effects, rather than "be-still-my-pants" jaw-droppers. The challenging opening sequence sees a camera panning backwards through space away from earth, beyond the edge of the Milky Way, outracing a jumble of radio static, which gets progressively "older", the farther out we go (as indicated by familiar tunes, news snippets and cultural signpost sounds - i.e. the farther out in space you get, the farther back in time you hear; in essence, time-traveling backwards - faster than light, no less, if you are outpacing radio waves!). Herein lies the foreshadowing of the whole plot. For those unfamiliar with the physics concept that underlines this sequence, the movie will make no sense.
The visualization of The Machine (that The Message instructed to build) was a marvel of utility and "alien" design, seamlessly integrated into the landscape of Cape Canaveral. Most impressive was the tragic sequence which destroyed the first Machine so artfully contrived, with views from the scores of "media" cameras covering the event - that the viewer never thinks to question where the reality ends and the green-screen babble begins.
Though technically not a "special effect", an astounding camera trick with a running girl in a mirror will have you scratching your head for weeks as to how it was concocted - for directorial *aficionados*, this sequence alone is worth the movie.
One can only hope that viewers can delve through the flummery (which must necessarily blossom during the latter stages of the movie, as The Machine traverses worm-holes) to the REAL "message" from Sagan: that the questioning and scientific mind is infinitely more precious to our species and creates more impetus for launching Mankind to the stars than the stagnating minds of the pseudo-science shamsters, which includes fanatical Christian contingents.
One of the best arguments against *religionistas* played out in the movie by the ever-psycho Jake Busey - is that no scientist has yet strapped himself with explosives and taken innocent lives in his quest to force an opinionated Physics viewpoint on other people, whom he believes he will "save" by blowing them up The incomparably-reliable David Morse is Ellie's encouraging father, while William Fichtner poignantly plays a blind astronomer colleague.
A stoic Tom Skerritt is simultaneously Ellie's supervisor and adversary, although thankfully is not painted as "villainous", even though cast as the obvious antagonist; an intelligent rendering, keeping his interests "scientific" rather than petty. Although he does prevaricate to score his Machine seat, he is noble enough to admit to Ellie, "I wish we lived in a world which rewarded honesty like yours", to which Ellie replies, "I thought the world is what we make of it."
Carl Sagan died before production was completed on "Contact", making it one of his last gifts to a blinkered world. The film's dedication read simply: "For Carl". I wept. Without him, the Universe seems like an awful waste of space.
(Movie Maniacs, visit: www.poffysmoviemania.com)
500 comments in total
Add another comment
Related Links