THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Movie Review: Arrival

Movie Review: Arrival

Article by Roy Adams Graphic by Allison Anderson

Author: Bodine, James/Tuesday, February 28, 2017/Categories: Home, Opinion

Rate this article:
No rating

With the current trend average sci-fi thrillers being made almost every year, such as Interstellar, Gravity, and The Martian; all laden with the same general story, given over and over again, who wants another one?  Director Denis Villeneuve (Incendies, Prisoners) seems to think people do.  I was skeptical when queuing up his latest work,  Arrival (2016), yet after finishing the piece and viewing it as a whole, I cannot help but appreciate how this film was ambitiously put together.

Amy Adams (American Hustle, Trouble with the Curve) gives a moving performance as Dr. Louise Banks, a linguistics expert brought to the site of an alien ‘arrival’.  The United States military places her as head of a communications team.  Banks is tasked with communicating directly with the beings and finding out what their purpose for visiting is.  

Her and physicist Ian Donnelly (Jeremy Renner - American Hustle, The Avengers) begin trying to communicate with the Heptapods.  Yet, humanity’s fear begins to take hold as a few nations threaten war upon the visitors, leaving the viewer wondering if humankind will fall towards its primitive instincts and attack. All the while, Dr. Banks fights with visions of a child’s life from birth to death that seem to deeply affect her, even though she has no idea why.  This aspect of the film adds to its success by giving it a human emotion to hold on too.

Unlike many of the modern Sci-Fi films out today, Villeneuve does not overuse CGI.  What sets this piece apart from the rest is the the Heptapods simple and rock like oval ships.  They look like giant rocks.  This is important because it is more buyable but also does not force the story to be about the aliens. It brings the story down to earth by allowing for emotional conflicts to be built, making this film much more relatable.

Villeneuve also does this by employing a strong composer Jóhann Jóhannsson (Sicario, The Theory of Everything) whom won the film a  20167 Oscar award for sound editing.  The score of the piece is easily the most notable aspect.  From the beginning where you can only hear muted helicopters as Dr. Banks flies to the sight, to the whale-like sounds of the Heptapods.  The sounds and ambiance created by  Jóhannsson left me on edge at all times.  The initially harsh soundtrack of the film gradually gets lighter as the film progresses; transitioning from heavy intense sounds to lighter strings being played in the background.  This is done quite well. In the beginning you get very long non-complex sounds that take over your head.  Towards the end the more complex string compositions are played as the audience figures out the complexity of the situation, drawing you into each scene especially towards the end.  

On a scale of 1-10 I would award this piece an 8.5.  Arrival forces the viewer to question what makes us what we are, and shows us the impact darkness can have on a person.  In the end it teaches you, when you are walking into the unknown and fear sets in, it is the best of us that shake it off, mend what has been broken, and persevere when all others are screaming attack.

 
Print

Number of views (2395)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Durango's Beloved Beaters

Morgan Smith and Sienna Reese

Fort Lewis College students will drive anything with four wheels! 

Whether cars are used to get to the slopes, back home or simply the grocery store, some Fort Lewis College students see their vehicle as the connection they have to the world outside of campus.  Take a look into the tales of five FLC students and their beloved beaters, to see the trust, love and tears that are put into owning an old car.    1999 JEEP...

The Old Fort Report

Kiiyahno Edgewater (Diné), Scout Edmondson, AJ Repinski, Derek Tippeconnie (Lenape)

Recognizing the past and reaching for the future of Fort Lewis College

On Tuesday Oct. 3, a group of Fort Lewis College students and faculty came together for the FLC Opportunities for Healing through Reconciliation Efforts event, held in the Center for Indigenous Research of Culture and Language to discuss a very troubling yet important topic: the release of History Colorado and FLC’s “Federal Indian Boarding Schools in Colorado, 1880-1920”...

Winter Wellbeing

Lisia Lucero

Losing light and losing time but not losing yourself

What is your definition of self care? Alita Lynch Alita Lynch, 18, first-year student: Lynch defines self care as time with herself that is free of worries and free of figuring out if she needs to do work. Kaneesha Bitsinnie Kaneesha Bitsinnie, 19, first-year student: Bitsinnie said she sees self care as taking care of your well-being and doing more than you...

My Friend Zoe

Mia McCormick

Acquainting Myself with Death.

I’m sitting at the base of a gnarled pinion pine tree in the middle of the woods behind the Bader-Snyder complex. It’s dark and the rain has been pounding the saturated soil relentlessly, but I am dry, and looking up at my protector, the arching branches that stretch around me like arms.  The smell of earth, wet bark and seeping sap mingle in my nose as I close my eyes,...

Indy on the Street

Mia McCormick

What are some of our Fort Lewis students going to be for Halloween tonight?

What are you going to be for Halloween?    Mya Simon third-year Music Performance and English major Calla Carrigan, first-year undecided: We are going to be wizard cowboys and will probably try to make our costumes or thrift them.  Mya Simon on left, Calla Carrigan on right   Jordan Mayhew second-year Psychology major: I am going to Rapunzel and...

First34568101112Last