Her 4.5/5
“Her” is the most bizarre yet
familiar movie I have ever seen.
The idea of falling in “Love” with
an operating system is a very improbable event for anyone of us, but what if it
could just happen?
Think for a second about your
relationship with your cell phone or with the internet. How do you describe it?
Is it normal, healthy or very reliant? Note how all of these descriptions are
humanly relevant, which makes me seriously wonder.
People have become more and more
dependent on technology in every aspect of their lives. Some are becoming
isolated and introverted and they tend to communicate indirectly via social
media.
This is an issue that needs to be
more addressed and that’s what the writer and director Spike Jonze tries to do, by sharing with us a phase in the
life of Theodore, a lonely unsocial writer, struggling with his feelings during
a hard divorce. Theodore buys a smart Operating System (O.S.) and decides, to
his bad luck, to give him a female voice. The O.S., which chose to name herself
Samantha, will expand quickly and will soon become an entity, but not only a
binary code one, but someone with feelings and personal ideas. It’s not long
before Theodore falls in love with her virtual perfection.
What is really smart in this movie
is that the director approaches this “love relationship” as if it is very
normal. He places it in a society where it is very usual for someone to talk to
his computer while walking on the road and he shows that all traditional phases
of a two human’s relationship apply to it.
This movie presents an interesting
idea and a phenomenon that is starting to form in our societies with a clever approach
using a high caliber cast including Joaquin
Phoenix, Scarlett
Johansson (playing the role of Samantha- we never get to see
her in the movie) Rooney
Mara and Amy
Adams who all deliver a outstanding performance.
This movie carries a very smart/ interesting message to us,
something we miss to notice or to remember in our quick modern life “even the smartest operating system fails to understand the
complexity of the human’s feelings and to satisfy his emotions.”
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