ARRIVAL (2016) Movie REACTION!!! *FIRST TIME WATCHING*

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 13 ต.ค. 2024
  • First time watching Arrival from 2016 directed by Denis Villeneuve, starring Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, and Michael Stuhlbarg!!! Full movie reaction!!!
    ⚡ Patreon (For UNCUT Movie Reactions and Early Access!!)
    / moviefusion
    / moviefusion
    / moviefusion
    Recorded on 12/12/22
    Thank YOU to my Patreons!
    ⚡ Twitch - / therealxpertfusion
    ⚡ GAMING TH-cam Channel (For Gaming Videos) - / xpertfusion
    ⚡ ExtraFusion TH-cam Channel (Extra Content & Clips) - / @xpertfusion2
    ⚡ My Twitter (GO FOLLOW ME!) - / xpertfusion3
    ⚡ My Letterboxd - letterboxd.com...
    THIS Channel will be for The Walking Dead content (as well as other Movie/TV Show videos)
    💰 TO DONATE: streamlabs.com...
    FAQ: (Questions that are asked to me OFTEN, will answer here)
    Q: Why is a small portion of the video completely muted?
    A: Copyright reasons. Sometimes I get hit with copyright claims AFTER the video has already been posted, my only choice is to refute the claim but if TH-cam denies it, I have to either take down the video or mute the small portion they are claiming. If the video has been up for a while, it is much easier for me to mute this small portion in the YT studio and then unmute it months later after people aren't watching the video as much.
    Q: Why is the movie not as loud as I want it to be, why can't you show more of it uncut?
    A: Copyright reasons. Notice a pattern here? Most of your questions will likely be answered with some type of copyright related reason.
    Q: Why is the movie footage flipped?
    A: Again, copyright reasons. I am watching the movie the normal way, it is only flipped for the video.
    My Headset - Turtle Beach 420X Stealth Plus (PURCHASE HERE) - amzn.to/2XuRT4l
    My Blue Yeti Microphone (PURCHASE HERE)- amzn.to/2XuZnEs
    Tags: TWD, The Walking Dead, telltale games, skybound, fan fiction, fan film, movies, tv shows, ranking, reaction, review, ranked, ranking, episodes, seasons, trailer, teaser, The Mandalorian, first time watching, watching for the first time, Star Wars, Marvel, Horror
    #movies #reaction #MovieReaction

ความคิดเห็น • 141

  • @robynjoffe1494
    @robynjoffe1494 ปีที่แล้ว +85

    She knew her daughter would get sick. As she said, she embraces her future, the good and the bad. And she sees all of it. She loved her daughter, and would rather have that experience, even knowing how it will end.
    The point about time not being linear is very important because she's not just remembering the future, she's *interacting* with it (as the talk with General Shan demonstrates). This is getting into theories having to do with time being the fourth dimension. The past, present, and future exist all at the same time in the fourth dimension, everything is always happening at once, but because we live in the third dimension (and we can't see the fourth), we can only perceive time as a line. The aliens can see the fourth dimension, and once she learns their language, she can too (aside from the intro, the flashes of her daughter only start appearing after their first breakthrough with the aliens).

    • @eddietucker7005
      @eddietucker7005 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Brilliant way to understand and communicate the film. Thank you.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Which is really selfish of Louise. She was only thinking about how she would feel. She never considered how her daughter would feel. She certainly saw what Ian would think because she took away his choice by not telling him until after they had their daughter. That's so incredibly selfish, no wonder he divorced her

    • @robynjoffe1494
      @robynjoffe1494 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @benjalucian1515 you seem to be assuming she could have made a different choice, but that's not how fourth dimension thinking works. Time isn't linear, she didn't make a decision based on what she had learned, she learned that she'd made that decision. If time isn't linear, everything that is going to happen is happening right now, but since we're not capable of seeing the fourth dimension, we can only perceive it as a series of events (linear). In learning the language, Louise became capable of seeing everything- past, present, future- all happening simultaneously.
      This clip, from 1:04 to 2:08, provides a really neat explanation of spacetime and the fourth dimension, if you're interested: th-cam.com/video/MOb1Yghbpxk/w-d-xo.html

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@robynjoffe1494 That's a question of the movie. Is the future they're seeing set in stone? If time is not linear, then time should be changeable. Louise is not being forced to have sex with Ian. She chooses to.

    • @robynjoffe1494
      @robynjoffe1494 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@benjalucian1515 I don't see that as being the question of the movie, since it only comes up very briefly at the end and isn't actually explored in any meaningful way. I think we're going to have to agree to disagree.

  • @dlweiss
    @dlweiss ปีที่แล้ว +40

    She 100% knew that her daughter would become sick and die - but she still wanted her daughter to have the opportunity to exist, and bring all her wonderful things to the world (like the poetry and drawings she mentions), and live the limited, mostly happy life she'd get. That's why Ian said she "made the wrong choice" before he divorced her - because she chose to marry him and give birth to child that she KNEW would one day get sick and die.

    • @KevinLyda
      @KevinLyda ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Every kid will eventually die.

  • @ohpaddy
    @ohpaddy ปีที่แล้ว +40

    I got chills when you realized that those events would partake in the future because I had the exact same reaction to that. So glad you enjoyed this movie as much as I did. I really love the balance between having a spectacular theme (aliens arriving on planet earth) and something so simple and emotional with Louise living her life with so normal emotions such as joy, love and pain. I think this is phenomenal cinema and I loved loved loved your reflections on it!

    • @MovieFusion
      @MovieFusion  ปีที่แล้ว +12

      I love movies with big twists like that, this one was easily one of the most shocking ones. Thank you for watching!!

    • @eduardorosas9002
      @eduardorosas9002 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@MovieFusion Hey could you react please the movie The Uninvited is like you describe this one a good movie with a good twist. Greets

  • @edgarrazo9681
    @edgarrazo9681 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    As a linguist myself, I can't emphasize how much I love this movie. Language is like magic to me; how we as species have created this system that allows us to recreate existence through our earthly means. That's why I chose this career, and why I've learned four languages.

    • @davidrees_
      @davidrees_ ปีที่แล้ว +6

      As a fellow linguist I have the exact same opinion!

    • @rickymort135
      @rickymort135 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​​@@davidrees_I'm a linguist too, a cunning linguist

    • @terryv2006
      @terryv2006 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The fact that Abbot and Costellos’ most famous routine, Who’s on First?, showcases just how ambiguous and confusing our language can be.

  • @haleywagner1962
    @haleywagner1962 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    This is in my top 5 movies of all time. I could watch it over and over and over. The feelings it invokes in you... That's what I value most in a movie. And the twist gets me every time with how brilliantly they presented it, all the little clues. Truly a masterpiece in my eyes.
    And yes, she knew what was going to happen to her daughter, but she wanted to still be able to meet her and get every moment she could, even if it does end badly. Kind of like the saying "It's better to have loved and lost, then to have never loved at all". And the non-linear thing is basically, the past, present, and future are all happening at once, which is how she's able to get information at certain times because she's already "lived" all of it.

  • @JusticeGamingChannel
    @JusticeGamingChannel ปีที่แล้ว +7

    NO, she said the general's words in the past, so he knew it in the future to tell her the words. Also she absoultely did know her kid would have cancer, that's whe she told her husband, and he couldn't take it. Even knowing the kid would have cancer, she still wanted the experience, and to give the kid a chance, the idea is to embrace the future, don't run away from it.

  • @hallyhop
    @hallyhop ปีที่แล้ว +13

    It is truly a masterpiece. That moment when it blew your mind 😂 So good. That’s why I love this movie so much. And the music is incredible

  • @lostalex77
    @lostalex77 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Arrival has a double meaning, the arrival of the aliens, but also the arrival of her daughter, which she chose to have even though she knew she would die.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Nominated for 8 Oscars including Best Picture but won for Best Sound Editing.

  • @IndySidhu88
    @IndySidhu88 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    @22:55 - There it is. Loved your reaction and one of my favourite films of all time.
    The General's wife’s last words are “In war there are no winners, only widows.”

    • @_starfiend
      @_starfiend 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "In war there are no heroes, only orphans and widows."

  • @Tigermania
    @Tigermania ปีที่แล้ว +7

    We are so conditioned to see flashbacks as a story telling device that we are fooled when shown a flash forward. I think your moment of realization was similar for most people who have seen this. A smart movie with a clever twist you don't see coming.

  • @MaafaxKelen
    @MaafaxKelen ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I loved this movie. And I like the paradigm that is assumed in it.
    You don't see the future, you remember it. And as you remember some part of your past (even if you have lived it completely) there is things you don't remember (things not important or too hard to remember surely).
    Remembering the future assume things like you can't change the future you remember. If you change it there is no point in remembering it. So... I think the future you will have and remember is the one you accepted. It's like trying to get the best ending in a game, and at a point say "I'm OK with that one" and you stop trying to change it. And the future you have is actually the one you agreed to have.
    She knows she is going to be married, and have a daughter... that will die young and be divorced with Ian. And she is OK with that. => Can you still accept to not give birth while you know she is going to live marvelously? Surely for the same reason that we are loving and caring for our parents even if we know that they will die one day? It's not the end that matters, it's the journey.
    And besides her life, can we imagine a world were we (as a population) finally know the future? How a war can be started? How can a trahison be committed? All the futures known by everyone will surely help growing humanity, science, finding solutions before having to struggle with the questions and so on.
    Arrival is kinda like a first stone toward and utopia?

  • @secoopjohnp
    @secoopjohnp ปีที่แล้ว +4

    One of my favorites and I always thought it was underrated just because a lot of people were confused by it or couldn’t get over how slow it is. But I was so captivated with the uniqueness of this movie. Soundtrack is beautiful. One of my all time favorite movie soundtracks

  • @davidrees_
    @davidrees_ ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This movie is top tier. I love that they went for a very 'atypical' protagonist (a translator/linguist instead of a doctor or scientist). As a fellow linguist I also love the way they handled the alien language in this movie, using the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis to make it a crucial part of the overarching story.

  • @RandyHall324
    @RandyHall324 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Gripping, thoughtful, and fascinating. One of my favorite sci-fi films.

  • @petitcroquette7831
    @petitcroquette7831 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Fun fact: this movie is adapted from a short story; "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang and the director of this movie, Denis Villeneuve, has managed to make a very good movie, like his other works.
    As a person who has a hobby of watching movies and as a graduate of literature, I like movies based on/adapted from books/novels.

  • @EsperUltima
    @EsperUltima ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You need to watch Arrival a few times to completely understand the movie, because most people missed a lot of details on the first watch. This is the kind of movie that gets better on repeat watch.

  • @distantraveller9876
    @distantraveller9876 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The paradox you're talking about is actually just the Chicken or Egg paradox in the context of time travel.

  • @anorthosite
    @anorthosite ปีที่แล้ว +1

    1) In the future (18 months) meeting, the Chinese general remembers how Louise changed his mind (in the present) by telling him something so private and personal. But he also surmises that she would have to have somehow gotten his private number to have done so. So, in the future meeting, he relates the number and the quote as "ENsurance", even though candidly admitting that he doesn't fully comprehend her ability. The only inconsistency is that, in the future, she 'should have' remembered having called him (at CIA/military gunpoint) more clearly. The idea being that there is still only one, consistent future - which itself then brings up the issue of determinism.
    2) Many reviewers state that Hannah died of cancer (the hair loss) and some even suspect it was somehow connected with some exposure Louise had on the Heptapod vessel. But Louise only mentions "a really rare disease", implying that it is something already medically known. I think the intention of the screenplay was that there was no exposure and that Hanna's illness/death was "natural" and merely served as a crucial decision point of the plot and theme.
    3) Not to get political, but the movie makes an unequivocal - and timely - slap at 'talk radio' (ala Alex Jones) and also (in passing) a certain 'News' channel.

  • @musicmashup9597
    @musicmashup9597 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Music is from Shutter Island

  • @tree6787
    @tree6787 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Wind River is an amazing movie. My favorite Jeremy Renner movie. ❤️

  • @veeeff2323
    @veeeff2323 ปีที่แล้ว

    She had her because she loved her! It's nonlinear time so there is no timeline for her at that moment. The general knew to give her the numbers because she called him. This movie was awesome.

  • @Reyesn7y
    @Reyesn7y ปีที่แล้ว +2

    i loooove when you realised that she was seeing the future, not the past

  • @wolfwing1
    @wolfwing1 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This movie is so masterful as even if you don't get the twist, your already there. Entire movie I'm like, just tell them you lost your daughter, they will unerstand." couldn't figure out why she didn't tell them, and then IT happens and it's like oh god no wonder.

  • @mattesrocket
    @mattesrocket 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    saw many, many reaction videos about ARRIVAL, no one figured it out like you: in one second all together and overwhelmed like super surprised.
    Some understood the tricky idea behind everything earlier than you, but more bit by bit, and others later than you, but it was funny how the realisation hit you here like in 1 second, you almost fell off your chair 😂 22:57

  • @MicahMann
    @MicahMann 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great movie! Been meaning to revisit it. Fun watching along with you.

  • @marielavielavigne
    @marielavielavigne ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Denis Villeneuve is from my province in Canada and when i saw Avatar 2 in the cinema he was in the same room and i was so starstrucked cause this movie is one of my favorite and it makes me proud to be from Quebec 🇨🇦❤️

  • @lynxvex
    @lynxvex ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Max Richter is the composer for that theme you've mentioned. He also did the soundtrack for the show, The Leftovers, which is a sci-fi from the creators of Lost and Watchmen.

  • @reynaldolorenzo8409
    @reynaldolorenzo8409 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Now that you’ve watched Dune and Arrival you need to keep watching Denis Villeneuve movies, he is top 3 directors of the past 13 years in my opinion. React to Prisoners, Blade Runner 2049 and you can watch the original but you don’t necessary need to but it helps kinda like Mad Max Fury Road, Sicario, Incendies, Enemy and I can’t wait for Dune 2.

  • @PowerDiva
    @PowerDiva 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The story we see with the arrival of the aliens are the actual flashbacks. The story with her daughter is closer to present day, but the way that they flip that on us is brilliant. We automatically assume it's the other way around until we all have the realization you did at the end. I too love a movie with a good twist, especially for an analytical brain like mine... it's not always easy to keep me guessing, I've figured out many a twist too early. I didn't guess this one.

  • @Steelburgh
    @Steelburgh ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Absolutely she knew about Hannah. She said it, "Even knowing the journey and where it leads, I embrace it, and I welcome every moment of it." She chose to let Hannah have what life she was able to enjoy, and she chose to meet and love her child for as long as she was able. Remember that this isn't like learning a fetus is likely to have a disease before it's born. Her memories spanned her future as well as her past. She ALREADY knew and loved her child before she was born. Ian didn't have that, and he blamed her for her choice and the pain Hannah would ultimately face. On that note, she also chose to love and marry Ian knowing they would end up going through a painful divorce. She chose the journey over the destination. This movie is beautiful and heart rending. As a divorced parent of young kids myself, I ugly cry every time I watch that ending.

    • @Steelburgh
      @Steelburgh ปีที่แล้ว

      Also, you're right about the music, "On the Nature of Daylight" by Max Richter, being used in other films like Shutter Island. In fact, when Villeneuve asked to use it, Richter said no because he felt it was overused. Villeneuve actually traveled to see him in person to explain how critical it was to the plot and emotional impact of the movie, and Richter agreed after hearing that.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Louise was so incredibly selfish. She had the choice to TELL Ian. She didn't because she knew he wouldn't agree with having a child. So she deliberately took away his choice. No wonder he would divorce such a selfish and manipulative person.

  • @vadalia3860
    @vadalia3860 ปีที่แล้ว

    That realization hit is so good, I reacted the same way. Not often a movie can completely blindside me but I loved it.

  • @GregNumber5
    @GregNumber5 ปีที่แล้ว

    The General's wife's last words were "swing away Merrill"

  • @jowbloe3673
    @jowbloe3673 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    If you knew your future child was only going to have a life of 100 years, would you consider having that child? Yes? What about 99 years? 98? . . .
    I can see the PTSD of your infant dying might be too much, and a reason to decide not to have that child, but who is to say how long a life makes it worthwhile?

  • @selenecelestial5498
    @selenecelestial5498 ปีที่แล้ว

    I enjoyed this movie so much, it was such a breath of fresh air in terms of alien visitation movies. I also love the idea that there is a universal language and understanding that ultimately transcends all - even time itself. That language I feel is love, which is also a concept explored in Interstellar. Love has no boundaries, it connects the fabric of all life together from the highest source, which some people refer to as "god," but which I feel as a term is limited by our human perspective of all things.
    These aliens understood that the humans who attacked them were simply reacting out of *fear,* but they were consciously advanced advanced enough to know that this didn't define humanity, they knew humanity's potential because they were above the illusion of time itself. They knew that eventually, (through the language they gifted us,) humanity would also transcend all the limitations and behavior that stem from fear of the unknown and come to their aid. This part of the story really touched me.
    She knew she would lose her daughter, but she loved her so much she wanted to give her that chance at life, no matter how brief, because the love for her daughter tied all of it together, it was that which enabled her to understand their language beyond time. It was all interconnected, at least that's how I saw it.
    I would love to see more movies exploring making contact with other beings outside of just "invasion" movies.
    Great reaction, matey. I really enjoyed watching how you engaged with the plot.

  • @naylisyazwina6836
    @naylisyazwina6836 ปีที่แล้ว

    This was a literal masterpiece. I love how the aliens weren't fully shown too

  • @mawrthvallis2788
    @mawrthvallis2788 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is movie making at it's absolute finest. Glad you've seen this and reacted like you did. Have subscribed. French movie "Amelie" is another film that invites and draws
    the viewer into the tangle of emotions that give life meaning.

  • @elbruces
    @elbruces ปีที่แล้ว +1

    First watch through you assume Gen. Shang is a bad guy, but think about it - the first time he heard "offer weapon," he was like "no, you ain't turning us against each other, get the fuck off my planet" You gotta commend him for that.

    • @EsperUltima
      @EsperUltima ปีที่แล้ว

      Nope. Shang didn't get "offer weapon". He got "use weapon", which was the same response from heptapod to Louis when she asked Costello in the white room. That implied that that when you asked "what's your purpose here?" And their answer was "use weapon" so it was assumed that "we want war/fight" when they mistranslated the word weapon as gift. Remember Louis's quote from her book "language is the first weapon drawn in a conflict" foreshadowing the mistranslation.

  • @digidv85
    @digidv85 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is a very unique entry that proves sci-fi/drama like Interstellar can work very well, in comparison to sci-fi/action or sci-fi/horror. Prisoners is also a fabulous entry, definitely worth checking out. Oh, and the tune that plays during the opening is called On the Nature of Daylight by Max Richter. It sounds familiar to you because it was also used in Shutter Island during the apartment nightmare sequence.

  • @_starfiend
    @_starfiend 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Louise tells her daughter it's a really rare illness. Cancer is far from a really rare illness.

  • @biglove1941
    @biglove1941 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    it's incredible he released Arrival and Sicario in the same year!

  • @XeonAlpha
    @XeonAlpha ปีที่แล้ว

    BTW that theme is called “On the Nature of Daylight.” There is a music video on YT of it and it’s incredibly powerful… without a single word being spoken.

  • @hallyhop
    @hallyhop ปีที่แล้ว

    Wow!! I did not see this coming!! But this is one of my favorite movies of all time. I’ve seen it sooo many times!

  • @Hansedgwick
    @Hansedgwick ปีที่แล้ว

    basically she experiences time all at the same time. The future past and present are all the present for her. And when she says “I know why my husband left me” she was actually experiencing that epiphany of why he left her.

  • @genida951
    @genida951 ปีที่แล้ว

    This movie runs on hard determinism, like Tenet or a bunch of other time travel movies. She had the kid because she remembered the kid. If she'd not had the kid she wouldn't have remembered that child existing at all, and the decision to have a kid would never have happened. Like the heptapods, she starts to partially and increasingly see/remember time/her entire life, the way they do. And that's what ends up happening, because it's already real. The theory that she didn't know about her daughers illness contradicts the divorce. He was mad about her decision to have their daughter "knowingly", after all. I'd also imagine determinism would frustrate the hell out of a physicist, or whatever he was.
    And if you haven't seen Tenet, put that on a list.

  • @jenniferarmstrong7722
    @jenniferarmstrong7722 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love this movie. Prisoners is such a good movie!!!!

  • @theman913
    @theman913 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is my favorite movie and I love that it stretches' the science fiction genre. ♥
    It seems like future events are treated like memory in this movie. You do not recall a memory until something triggers it, and you do not know a future event until something triggers it.

  • @rollomaughfling380
    @rollomaughfling380 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    01:25 It's Max Richter's _On the Nature of Daylight,_ from his 2004 protest album _The Blue Notebooks._ It's been used in something like 2 dozen movies and TV shows, including Scorsese's 2010 _Shutter Island._ Personally, I think it was a mistake to use it in the film, as it screwed the (amazing) composer, Jóhann Jóhannsson (RIP), out of a chance for a "Best Original Score" Oscar nomination he was being considered for, because the film used it so prominently. It's not just musicians-Film and TV Directors and Editors also get "demo-itis." Jóhannsson could have come up with something great that fit the same mood as the temp track standing on his head, if he'd been willing.
    Might be my only criticism of this great film, as that track's become a cliché on the level of Samuel Barber's _Adagio for Strings._ Hell, I could have delivered a fine job at it if Villeneuve even knew who I was, lol. Not that I agree at all with the Academy's decision, but Hollywood has been disrespecting composers, who are so critical to a film's success or failure since the mid-century, and especially the '80s when the NLRB crippled any chance of a Composer's Guild that had any teeth, and everybody had to start fighting each other for jobs as Independent Contractors. A real shame.

  • @mclovin8435
    @mclovin8435 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    One of my favorite films ever

  • @romanzolanski6256
    @romanzolanski6256 ปีที่แล้ว

    You reaction really didn't disappointed when you realized the plot twist 😂 this movie is trully a masterpiece when you pay attention and I like how this is an alien movie but so different from the others.

  • @rumham7466
    @rumham7466 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love love alien visitor movies. That and apocalypse/post apocalypse. Zombie.
    We need more good ones.

  • @Grottgreta
    @Grottgreta ปีที่แล้ว

    Like everything is happening at once in her mind, past present and future. It's non-linear like the heptapods language, that's why she could see Shangs phone number in the future, call him and tell him his wifes words all at the same time

  • @tonyleong4961
    @tonyleong4961 ปีที่แล้ว

    This wasn't a 'Hollywood' enough movie....Box Office was a concern. It's very cerebral, so they had to get multiple sources of financing. But if you bring together the right team (producers, director, cast, production design, cinematographer, composer etc) you can do amazing things...Great job by Eric Heisserer to adapt the Ted Chiang short story as well.

  • @scoobysnacks
    @scoobysnacks ปีที่แล้ว

    The aliens sort of look like giant "Thing"s from the Addams Family.

  • @BasedNate
    @BasedNate ปีที่แล้ว

    27:46 There is no "future" and there is no "past" if time is indeed non-linear. Time is circular like how they write in their language, so events always take place before and after each other. To make it simpler, think of time as a clock and put the events on that clock. At the 12 o'clock position put the event of the Chinese Minister telling Louise his number and at the 6 o'clock position put the event of Lousie calling him. If you start at 12 o'clock, you can see that Louise first got the number from him, then at 6 o'clock, she called him and then circle back around to 12 o'clock he is able to tell her that he received her call and she's the reason for the unity. If you look at the events this way you can see there is no paradox, the conversation Louise and the Minister had at the Unification Event happened both before and after she called him if time is non-linear.

  • @SPQRatae
    @SPQRatae ปีที่แล้ว

    The music is by Max Richter. A great composer.

  • @CharlesDunkley
    @CharlesDunkley ปีที่แล้ว

    The music that opens and closes the film is "On the Nature of Daylight" by Max Richter. He's a brilliant composer. He also composed the soundtrack to HBO's The Leftovers tv series, which is a really great and strange show. In my Top 3 HBO shows. As for this film, one of my favorite moments is when we are first introduced to General Shang. There's a scene in the compound where they are talking and in the background the news is talking about General Shang. We see the CIA Agent using his satellite phone at that same moment, foreshadowing how Louise will need to use that phone to contact the General later in the film. Overall, Arrival is one of my favorite films to come out in a long time (the other one being The Witch, directed by Roger Eggers). I suspect Arrival will ultimately end up in my Top 10 Favorite films of all time when all is said and done.

  • @crashingimpulse
    @crashingimpulse ปีที่แล้ว

    This film just stays with you

  • @ratatataraxia
    @ratatataraxia ปีที่แล้ว

    What products do you put in your hair? I wanted to ask on the last stream but I missed it.

  • @tree6787
    @tree6787 ปีที่แล้ว

    I really love this movie.

  • @Abdullah_D_Luffy
    @Abdullah_D_Luffy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For the kid, I always think of it this way imagine you have a child right now who is 10 years old and ask yourself if you knew they would die next year do you wish they were never born, if you can happily and gladly say, you’d wish your child was never born while looking at them and having all of the memories with them thenthe movie is proven wrong on having her go through with it, otherwise you have to then start to understand why she made the choice

  • @UnderhillKoufax
    @UnderhillKoufax ปีที่แล้ว

    If you become a parent one day, you will hopefully understand the importance of the existence of that future child…including all of the love, joy, hope, and pain they will bring into the world. The goal isn’t to live forever anyway, but to live well and make a positive difference however we can.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, but parents are hoping that child is healthy. They don't know if a child will become ill. Many people who carry a deadly genetic disease get tested and choose not to put a future child through that.

    • @UnderhillKoufax
      @UnderhillKoufax 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@benjalucian1515, If we somehow know that a child will live a life of beauty and love for 1, 5, 10, 15, or more years before they die, then many parents will let them have a chance to experience life before they go. We all die in the end after all. Of course, the experience of pregnancy is always a personal choice for the mother. Her body, her choice.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@UnderhillKoufax *If we somehow know* If being the operative word. *then many parents will let them have a chance to experience life before they go* Then many parents are extremely selfish. No surprise there. Ask yourself, if you knew your child was going to die of some horrible disease in 5-10-15 or more years, would you tell them? Or would you keep them in the dark and lie to them when they talked to you about their future you know they would never have?
      *the experience of pregnancy is always a personal choice for the mother* The experience yes, actually GETTING pregnant? No, it should be the choice of BOTH man and woman.

    • @UnderhillKoufax
      @UnderhillKoufax 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@benjalucian1515, In case you didn’t know, this is a sci-fi movie about a parent who knew. And NOT having the child would have broken her timeline that saved humanity. So if you would make a different choice than that is you. Do you even have children? As a parent, I understand the decision she made and its consequences to all of humanity in that story.

  • @TheBlond49
    @TheBlond49 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Lois Lane dealing with Aliens again.

  • @DaringDasher
    @DaringDasher ปีที่แล้ว

    Great, unexpected reaction! Love this film.

  • @jenniferdarling6
    @jenniferdarling6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I adore this director

  • @tristanvoyageur87
    @tristanvoyageur87 ปีที่แล้ว

    You should check out The Hurt Locker starring Jeremy Renner. It won Best Picture at the Oscars, and the first ever woman to win Best Director.

  • @Captainmarex
    @Captainmarex ปีที่แล้ว

    Movie shocked me how much i ended up loving it

  • @cjs_bomb
    @cjs_bomb ปีที่แล้ว

    Ive seen so many Jeremy renner movies recently which is a coincidence because he's in the hospital rn lol. Maybe i subconsciously miss him. Except film

  • @zahrah5193
    @zahrah5193 ปีที่แล้ว

    So looking forward to this reactionnn. Also, you’ve got to see Blade runner 2049 too. it’s by the same director and is just amazing in every way :)

  • @jerroldhernando5226
    @jerroldhernando5226 ปีที่แล้ว

    can you do the movie Fall? it also has some good twist in the near end.

  • @benjalucian1515
    @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You were right. A decent person would not have a child if they KNEW that child would suffer and die young from an incurable cancer. Louise was incredibly selfish. She literally says she had the child so SHE could have good memories about her. What about Hannah? What about Ian? She knew she was doing something selfish because she didn't tell Ian until it was too late She deliberately took away his choice. No wonder he divorced her and it wasn't amicable, because she speaks of him bitterly in the future "If you want science call your father." How many lies did she tell Hannah when Hannah talked about a future Louise knew she would never have? The Louise character is despicable.

  • @riahw3750
    @riahw3750 ปีที่แล้ว

    I fell asleep when I watched this😂 idk how

  • @Cenindo
    @Cenindo ปีที่แล้ว

    Easily the most intelligent sci-fi movie of its entire decade, with no vulgarities and no violent aliens. Also, while the special effects are perfectly decent, there isn't an onslaught of eye-candy to cover up a weak story as in some other movies we can think of.

  • @1amazeme
    @1amazeme ปีที่แล้ว

    If you want to talk about non-linear, you should consider that do you thought the movie was good until that twist. After that odds are your head started rolling backwards on the movie and locating those spots that were given to you as clues. Your mind went backwards. Non-linearily.

  • @andreacongdon7912
    @andreacongdon7912 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you like Jeremy Renner check out the movie Wind River

  • @belac.howard8295
    @belac.howard8295 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you ever get a chance to watch the movie Tag, it's absolutely funny, and Jeremy Renner is part of y it's funny

  • @Andrew3455
    @Andrew3455 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I assume you don't have children. I would like to give my perspective. As someone who is a foster parent and a parent. It is a tough choice and I think I would choose to have my child anyway.
    The situation becomes this. Having my children literally changed me and made me who I am today. My children made me kinder, made me funnier, made me more hopeful to the future, and made me care about others more than I ever had before.
    They gave me the best job I ever had and the job I feel like I was meant to have which was being a daddy. The love you get and the love you get to give is something that is unexplainable.
    To get all of those things your price would be a lifetime of mourning...
    It is a difficult decision but being a dad often means you put yourself second.
    I would be willing to suffer a lifetime of sadness if it meant I could give my child 12 years of joy.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So far you just pointed out all the things YOU get from your child. What about what your child gets? Pain, fear, suffering, lack of a future? Doesn't sound like you're too mindful about that.

    • @Andrew3455
      @Andrew3455 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You're adding a lot into the movie that was never discussed to make a point. I do not recall it being discussed that the illness would be painful.
      Or that there would be suffering. A child having a lifetime of love and impact cut short or no life at all? You reference a future cut short. Not being conceived, the child would also lack a future no?
      I do not recall saying its an obvious choice. I stated it would be a difficult one. Years of love and happiness cut short or an absence of life.
      You claim I only reference what I would get however do not forget that I would also choose to carry a lifelong burden of pain for 8 to 12 years of giving my child joy and love. Imho.

    • @benjalucian1515
      @benjalucian1515 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Andrew3455 *You're adding a lot into the movie that was never discussed to make a point* It was clearly implied. *I do not recall it being discussed that the illness would be painful. Or that there would be suffering* Daughter ended up bald. That means a sort of chemo. Not pleasant and there is not any sign that it wasn't painful for her.
      *Not being conceived, the child would also lack a future no* What child? A non-existent child that is only imagined?
      *I would also choose to carry a lifelong burden of pain for 8 to 12 years of giving my child joy and love. Imho* Compared to living in fear of dying, pain, chemo and knowing you have no future? I'd say you're getting off easy compared to a child you subjected to all that?

  • @michaelsweenie-lane359
    @michaelsweenie-lane359 ปีที่แล้ว

    Check out "A Ghost Story" You will love it - in my top 10 of all time

  • @TowGunner
    @TowGunner ปีที่แล้ว

    Concerning your thumbnail, did you sit on something sharp?

  • @minorking1121
    @minorking1121 ปีที่แล้ว

    I know this wasn't your intention, but the phrase "I just solved it" comes off a little odd. At that point in the movie they're trying to tell the audience what's happening. They're not doing it in a stupid in your face way, but they're certainly explaining it so the whole audience (hopefully) starts to realize what they've been seeing this entire time. Idk I'm probably just being harsh, but I solved it sounds like you a cracked a code or something when I think what you really mean is, "oh I get it now".

  • @wafaasaid5661
    @wafaasaid5661 ปีที่แล้ว

    Please do reaction to red sparrow movie (2018)🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @gebe6560
    @gebe6560 ปีที่แล้ว

    Blade runner is also same level movie

  • @mupicap7927
    @mupicap7927 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    React to other DENIS V. Film pleaseee.

    • @MovieFusion
      @MovieFusion  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      A couple of them are on my watchlist!

  • @DB20204
    @DB20204 ปีที่แล้ว

    She knew her daughter would die. That's why her husband left her. I don't blame him. It was a selfish decision on her part, and intentionally deceitful because she didn't tell him until after the child was born. As much as I can sympathize and cry over a love being so great that it's worth experiencing tragedy in its wake, it's just wrong. She can relive moments with her daughter because of how she experiences time, so the loss is mitigated. The dad cannot and is just left with impending doom, and the knowledge that it could have been avoided but he was essentially used. IMO, a moral person would have revealed the truth of the child's inevitable death before conception. Even revealing the truth after conception and doing testing to confirm the genetic disorder and then getting an abortion would have been fine. The poor dad.

  • @akil_almaeiz5652
    @akil_almaeiz5652 ปีที่แล้ว

    For years I’ve been waiting for someone this intelligent to review the movie. You are the first person I’ve seen agree that a singular ship would cause unease to all the other countries as it could appear like an invasion from on earth as opposed to an invasion from another planet.

  • @dahveed72
    @dahveed72 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    She knew. And no you don't understand. No one does

  • @davidstevenson404
    @davidstevenson404 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    He has icky growths

  • @jpa5038
    @jpa5038 ปีที่แล้ว

    No, she knows that if she does have a child with him, the child will get cancer and die from it. This is the part of the movie that I didn't enjoy. It's great overall, but this unethical decision just seemed selfish and unjustifiable.

    • @Knightowl1980
      @Knightowl1980 ปีที่แล้ว

      The decision to have the child? Or to not tell him until after having it ?

    • @jpa5038
      @jpa5038 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Knightowl1980 both

  • @fjgiie
    @fjgiie ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm not going to leave a comment. You will not have time to read it.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This movie is overrated. It is extremely effective at emotional manipulation to be sure, but it honestly has little to say if you step back and really think about it. I get the film has lot to say about the importance of linguistics, but that's not a theme or something anyone would disagree with. The anti-war message is nice, but I'd be hard pressed to think of a movie that was pro-war. It is indeed a beautifully made innovated sci-fi film and no one is going to say otherwise, but a forgettable flick all the same.
    Honestly, I keep forgetting this movie exists until it pops off in my radar.
    Fun Fact: In Arrival (2016) Forest Whitaker plays a military officer who recruits civilian experts with special skills to assist with the first contact of an alien species. In Species (1995) he was a civilian expert with a special skill who was recruited to assist with the first contact of an alien species.
    Solving Style Fact: While the shape of the ship was decided early on, Denis Villeneuve had great difficulty imagining an interior that would allow humans to easily navigate through such a steep and vertical design. The later decision to turn gravity sideways offered an obvious and convenient solution.
    Rosetta Stone Fact: Director Denis Villeneuve and screenwriter Eric Heisserer created a fully functioning, visual, alien language. Heisserer, Villeneuve, and their teams managed to create a "logogram bible" that included over a hundred different completely operative logo-grams, seventy-one of which are actually featured in the movie.

    • @musicmashup9597
      @musicmashup9597 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      for a guy who doesn't like it you sure know a lot of facts

    • @deeznuts-kj3bu
      @deeznuts-kj3bu ปีที่แล้ว +3

      this all you can come up with?

    • @BigGator5
      @BigGator5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Music Mashup ...On a critical and technical level, it's a great movie. I just find it thematically shallow.
      Go in Peace and Walk with God. 😎 👍

    • @jenniferdarling6
      @jenniferdarling6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      You listed all the reasons it's unforgettable 🍿👍

    • @haleywagner1962
      @haleywagner1962 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      See I feel the theme of the movie is quite apparent. It's the question she presents. If you knew how your whole life plays out, if you knew what was going to happen, would you do anything to try and change it? And you see her characters personal answer by seeing all the flashforwards. I find it deeply moving.
      And don't get me wrong, I totally respect your opinion! We all experience art differently, that's the great thing about it. I just thought I'd give my take on it, see if it maybe resonates at all with you. Sending good vibes your way (cheesy, I know, I just cant think of a way to end this positively so you dont think Im criticising you)! 😊

  • @Kilgore_Trout_jr
    @Kilgore_Trout_jr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your initial reaction was to deny the child an existence, disturbing.

  • @jenniferbayarea5748
    @jenniferbayarea5748 ปีที่แล้ว

    You’re so cute ugh