Somehow they were getting video back out. I don't remember now if it was streamed or physically removed. But if there is something potentially alien, why send in a couple small teams to get wiped out? And why go so far in off the bat? Send in tethered/wired drones. Send in large parties that don't try to set up military encampments to get some data and return quickly for analysis. Establish a perimeter around the entire land side of the shimmer and see when her "husband" walked out. It's the prototypical horror movie logic - lets split up and go in small groups so they can wipe us out.
They kept saying how nobody returned, well no ****, you send in small teams and push them to the center of a meteor strike with alien goings-on. What the heck do you think is going to happen? They are going to invite you over for a crab feed? What happened to a quick recon and return?
I was referring to she and her husband being alien and not human at the end. Of course they are alien and didn't make it out "intact". Super predictable.
The lighthouse scene was interesting but I am still trying to figure out what it was trying to get across/accomplish. And if the fact that the audience is just supposed to go "What the heck" and not understand the implications or meaning, I consider that lazy storytelling, or at least, you didn't to a good job telling the story.
They kept saying how nobody returned, well no ****, you send in small teams and push them to the center of a meteor strike with alien goings-on. What the heck do you think is going to happen? They are going to invite you over for a crab feed? What happened to a quick recon and return?
I was referring to she and her husband being alien and not human at the end. Of course they are alien and didn't make it out "intact". Super predictable.
The lighthouse scene was interesting but I am still trying to figure out what it was trying to get across/accomplish. And if the fact that the audience is just supposed to go "What the heck" and not understand the implications or meaning, I consider that lazy storytelling, or at least, you didn't to a good job telling the story.
I loved "Arrival" - I thought it was a MUCH better movie than Annihilation. Similar with Ex Machina. I thought Blade Runner did a great job living up to the expectation as a successor to the original and being able to capture that magic. Annihilation just didn't do it, at least, not for me.
In my view, the lighthouse scene delivers much thematic resonance with the rest of the film, particularly with respect to the “splitting of the cell” motif that appears again and again. If you’ll recall, each member of the expedition was broken in some fundamental way, and at the lighthouse, the biologist directly encounters the source of the shimmer, the source of that which changes the world around it. Before the psychologist is annihilated by that same source, she says that she knows not what it wants, or if it wants at all. It’s a uniquely human impulse to search for meaning where there often is none to be found. What the biologist finds instead is a mirror. The shimmer challenges her to break free of herself. She leaves transformed by it, with new insight and acceptance. She meets a “new” version of her husband, and accepts him, as well. I didn’t find it predictable, or rather, I didn’t find that predictability to be a flaw. I don’t know what it is about film as an artform that audience’s think should deliver surprise or a “twist.” Of course they were both changed. That’s what the shimmer does. But how they react to that change in their moment of meeting, with an embrace, struck me as a powerful message of acceptance of “the new.”
There’s a difference between offering the audience a question they can’t answer and offering the audience a question they don’t know how to answer. I’d argue that Annihilation accomplished the latter very well. It’s not lazy storytelling if you’ve given the audience much to chew on, but also the challenge of interpreting the taste. It should require some intellectual effort. There’s a reason 2001 is still considered a heavyweight of science fiction storytelling. It’s oblique. It’s opaque. But it’s not entirely inaccessible. It just requires more of the audience than audience members are often comfortable with. Annihilation is much the same, in my estimation.
There’s a difference between offering the audience a question they can’t answer and offering the audience a question they don’t know how to answer. I’d argue that Annihilation accomplished the latter very well. It’s not lazy storytelling if you’ve given the audience much to chew on, but also the challenge of interpreting the taste. It should require some intellectual effort. There’s a reason 2001 is still considered a heavyweight of science fiction storytelling. It’s oblique. It’s opaque. But it’s not entirely inaccessible. It just requires more of the audience than audience members are often comfortable with. Annihilation is much the same, in my estimation.