As I was watching this movie, many issues started to pop up in my mind: is our world progressively coming to the point where we will have programed machines that roam on the planet with us? Will we have hovering vehicles by 2019 (which is present in the movie)? Will our planet be always really dark and raining?
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Log Entry #14: 11/16/10
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Log Entry #13: 11/11/10
Yesterday, we finished watching the film Contact (based on Carl Sagan's cosmos theories) in class. Staring Jodie Foster as Dr. Arroway, a radio astronomer searching for extraterrestrial intelligence who, one day, receives a message from a different planet called Vega. After thoroughly reading Sagan’s article, “The Quest for Extraterrestrial Intelligence”, it became came quite clear that the the information stated in the story was the driving force for what led Dr. Arroway to search for a message from other civilizations. He believed that the search for alien life is a task that might be very hard to succeed in, but with all the space in the universe, there must be some kind of life. In the movie, Ellie and her scientific team do make contact with aliens, and the film elaborates on that key point for the rest of the movie. Throughout movie, there are many scenes where Ellie chooses reasoning over intuition and does not believe in a God. As a result, she is not chosen as the one human to go to Vega in the first attempt (in the U.S.). On that same note, Ellie was questioned about god when her father died suddenly. She said that "only if I had the medicine in the lower level, I would have been able to save him".I found this quite interesting because it would take more like a miracle to save a person, rather than, just using medicine. In conclusion, with watching this movie, it has given me a lot of desire to peer into the sky and truly question what is out there.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Movie Response Entry #2: 11/10/10
When Sean and I finally were able to watch "The Butterfly Effect, we concluded that we choose two movies that were really quite similar. Evan (the main character in "The Butterfly Effect") had the ability to use his journals to go back in time and alter the past. Although, with doing such an act, he changed the out- come of what was going to happen in the future. This was quite coincident to what Donnie was able to do; the both of the main characters had the ability to use what they know while living the present, and able to go back in time and change the total outcome of what is going to happen in the future. On another note, I thought that both films where also quite similar in how the main character's troubles/ schemes all revolved in the fate of their significant female friend. For example, in "The Butterfly Effect", Evan was always trying to make sure that Kayleigh always had a good future and did this by altering what happened in their childhood. Similarly, Donnie realized that his girlfriend should have a good life( rather than being run over by Frank's car), so he used the worm hole to go back in time and took his life rather than Gretchen's.
Usually, I am not a fan of Ashton Kutcher but he was quite good at playing a serious role for once. This was a film I wouldn't just pick up to watch if I was hanging with my friends, but defiantly as a family movie. I liked all the thrill that happened to him as a child, and how it shaped him as person. For example, when Evan was a kid he was staged into pornographic movie, which he did not think how Kayleigh's life should be framed around. But when Evan was older, he went back to that moment and just told Kayleigh's dad to never touch her and it led her to emancipate herself when she was 15. In conclusion, with watching this movie, it lead to really think what it would be like to have the abilities to alter the past. Although with such power, I wouldn't know when to really stop and know this is the life that I want to live, and it could lead to a death shorter in life.
Monday, November 8, 2010
Movie Response Entry #1: 11/8/10
As the first movie Sean and I watched, we decided that "Donnie Darko" would be quite similar to the movie "The Butterfly Effect. We came to the conclusion to select these two films, due to both the main characters had the ability to go into the future. But while they were in the future, they had the ability to experience the failures and promising moments that were happening. Although, that also led to the main characters to decide whether they want their friend to live or not. This was defiantly the case in the movie, "Donnie Darko". Donnie was able to carry out his life (surviving the air plane crash on his house), where he met a nice girl, but was tormented by his alter-ego/ scary bunny. In the life that Donnie was shown in for most of the movie, Frank (evil bunny), runs over Donnie's so called girl friend. Moreover, as the movie starts to come to an end, Donnie has to decide whether he should allow his girlfriend to live (by not getting run over), or her dying with Donnie surviving of the plane crash that destroyed most of his house.
I honestly loved this movie for all the thrill, scary plots, and horrendous looking bunny. It was a movie, in which you thought you knew what was going to happen, but instead something horrific happened. For example, when Donnie was at the movie with his girl friend, you would have thought nothing was going to happen. Instead, Frank comes into play and tells Donnie to leave the girl to sleep while he torches the administrator's house (who get arrested later for child pornography). Furthermore, the movie truly demonstrated how hard it would be to be schizophrenic, and how much that kid's life and other peoples' life could be a risk. In conclusion, if i had the opportunity to tell a friend about this movie, I would say that it was a scary/dark movie, but interesting on what he decided for the girl's fate and his own, how he could see worm holes, and what kind of destruction he would create.
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