Another sci-fi movie!!! 🤩🤩Do you think that there is life somewhere else in the universe? Patreon (full length & polls): www.patreon.com/ Subscribe to the channel: kzbin.info Follow me on Twitter for stuff and selfies: twitter.com/verowak
@davidward97373 ай бұрын
Absolutely, we would be arrogant to think that there isnt life out there in the galaxy among 10 billion trillion planets. Look at how much different life there is on earth. Between humans other mammals, fish, animals and birds
@crisdekker82233 ай бұрын
Be an awful waste of space if there weren't😀
@DrewAnti19603 ай бұрын
Yes and they think they have seen seven different stars with Dyson Spheres around them. I heard some scientists talking about it. They’re not sure but what if it were true? Awesome ❤
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
Is there Life elsewhere in the Universe? The best, most honest answer we can give is, "We don't know." We have no way of knowing if there is or isn't Life elsewhere. We simply don't have enough information. All we can do is speculate and give our opinions. We have no facts. Do I believe that Life exists elsewhere in the Universe? Yes, but we may never discover it. The Universe is Vast to the Nth degree!
@rexwilliams76433 ай бұрын
The shear size of just the known Universe means the probability is high but it also that size means we are unlikely to ever find out.
@555smo3 ай бұрын
My dad was in this movie. He plays one of the many faceless spectators in the courtroom at the end. RIP pops ❤
@PlagueXKill3R3 ай бұрын
Very coool! RIP ❤❤
@LukeLovesRose3 ай бұрын
Contact is a great and underrated sci-fi classic, and more proof that the 1990s is one of the greatest decades in film history
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
I do really love the 90s movies that I've seen! Makes me excited to see more
@danzthename3 ай бұрын
that's for dang sure
@曾志海-c4z3 ай бұрын
Totally agree.
@ReinersBlauerHoden2 ай бұрын
Its great until it turns to this absolute trash with her father
@LukeLovesRose2 ай бұрын
@@ReinersBlauerHoden The ending is a little anticlimactic. But that makes it unique. It could be worse. It could be like the ending to Mission to Mars
@dumy1873 ай бұрын
The "waste of space" thing is a Carl Sagan quote.
@andrewcorlett59543 ай бұрын
Forrest Gump, 12 Angry Men, Sixth Sense and now Contact. Verowak has been on a tear of late with some excellent movies.
@tc713 ай бұрын
Her disgust with Drumlin was funny to watch. 😄
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
I love dislikable characters in movies, but they make me so mad! 🤣
@BonniBarlow-fn6oj3 ай бұрын
She wanted him to die - I thought, just wait.
@scoot-f5y3 ай бұрын
Damn! If you've never seen Jodie Foster in a movie, then you HAVE to watch 'Silence Of The Lambs', starring her and Anthony Hopkins. One of the greatest suspense movies of all time.
@watts182693 ай бұрын
Hard AGREE!
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
"The Accused" (1988) with Kelly McGillis. Foster won four awards for Best Actress, including the Oscar.
@windsorkid70693 ай бұрын
Panic room. Another good one.
@jamesalexander56233 ай бұрын
Maybe risk "Taxi Driver"?
@scoot-f5y3 ай бұрын
@@jamesalexander5623 Also a very good one. Then again, I can't really think of any movies she's done that she hasn't passed all expectations. Even in movies where she only has a very limited bit part, such as in the movie 'The Inside Man', she shines.
@Pixelologist3 ай бұрын
Dr. Carl Sagan was heavily involved in this production but sadly passed away approximately six months before the film was released.
@woeshaling64213 ай бұрын
i've watched this on repeat for a long time. The opening radio scene stayed with me to this day
@orangewarm13 ай бұрын
“The idea that God is an oversized white male with a flowing beard, who sits in the sky and tallies the fall of every sparrow is ludicrous. But if by 'God,' one means the set of physical laws that govern the universe, then clearly there is such a God." Sagan
@samuelbutterworth43033 ай бұрын
Similar to the opening sequence of the movie, Carl Sagan did some PBS specials, in one he started a camera a meter above a couple on a picnic, then kept pulling away different distances until he was at the end of the universe. Then went into one of the people going down to the sub-atomic level. Showing the huge range of everything in the universe.
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
The main theme of Carl Sagan's novel, "Contact", was the conflict between scientific inquiry and religious belief. Ellie built her life on "knowing" things rather than "believing in" things. One of Sagan's goals in his too short life was to teach us all that we MUST base our understanding of Life, the Universe and Everything on what we KNOW and not on what we believe.
@bobbolondz27013 ай бұрын
Sounds like scientism.
@jeffmansfield9143 ай бұрын
But oddly, the movie kinda does the opposite. Ellie didn’t believe in God like Palmer did because he could provide no “proof”… only his personal experience and belief. Once Ellie went on her journey, nobody believed her because she could offer no “proof” other than her personal experience and belief that it was real. If we are frustrated that other characters don’t believe Ellie’s story without concrete evidence, we should be open to believing Palmer’s. To me, the movie makes a decent case for faith.
@NZBigfoot3 ай бұрын
@@jeffmansfield914 I like to quote Babylon 5 on this sort of thing, as one character says "Faith and reason are the shoes on your feet. You can travel further with both than you can with just one"... and given Babylon 5 was written pretty much all by one guy whos an atheist but with a respect to the concept of religion, and as an agnostic myself... each side offers a person something different, it just goes bad when either side thinks the other is irrelevant (especially when at their core they dont step on each others toes at all). Theres so much we dont know, and we wont know until we eventually know it... fighting just slows down getting to the knowing. Carl Sagan was also an Agnostic from what i gather and the movie to me at least sits that middle ground until the 'reveal' at the end.
@mattrismatt3 ай бұрын
@@NZBigfoot The thing is, if you wait until the 'reveal' at the end, it might be too late.
@neil24443 ай бұрын
@@NZBigfoot Well put. To say Carl Sagan was against religion would be like saying Albert Einstein was against religion, and he was famously known for saying that god does not play dice with the universe. I think the truth is that science doesn't consider nor attempt to disprove the existence of god. It means you can be a scientist and a believer, so long as you're not deriving conclusions on the basis of belief.
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
"Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space." -- Douglas Adams
@rijlqanturis6253 ай бұрын
Goddamn, "For Carl" always makes me tear up. Love this movie.
@chanceneck80723 ай бұрын
Carl Sagan.
@fakereality963 ай бұрын
@@chanceneck8072 Carl's Jr. 🌟
@chanceneck80723 ай бұрын
@@fakereality96 Idk what that means.
@mikekay33133 ай бұрын
When I was growing up I watched/listened to his narration of "The Cosmos" series. I was LOCKED In and in awe at 9 years old grasping how huge and amazing the universe really is. 100% it shaped my future. Carl was a gift to our planet and species.
@MatthewPettyST13003 ай бұрын
@@mikekay3313 If a science guy, late teens can have an Idol to be proud of,.......it would be him. I'm now 69 !
@mikefox61723 ай бұрын
"Funny, I always thought that the world is what we make of it." Amen.
@carm3d3 ай бұрын
If you watch this again, look for a symbol that keeps appearing throughout the film. A crescent-shaped constellation. It was in the spilled popcorn when her father collapsed. At the very start when the camera pulls out of young Ellie's eye, you can see a reflection of the machine in her eye, minus the rings. When Ellie first got the signal and was rushing into the building, there was a hidden cut, splitting two different takes at two different locations. They used video morphing to make it pretty seamless. In the space pull-out intro sequence, look closely at Mars, the famous Mars "face" structure is visible.
@rickharms13 ай бұрын
The movie does not do justice to the book. Originally there were six people on the trip. Having only one person justifies people’s skepticism.
@matthewmarcinko91573 ай бұрын
This is my favorite of all Jodie Foster's films. I can't get through the ending without crying my eyes out. Thank you for reacting to this, Ms. Verowak...
@Browncoat663 ай бұрын
One of the flight controllers in this film was Gerry Griffen a real life Flight Controller from the Apollo project at NASA..
@havok62803 ай бұрын
It's between this and Silence of the Lambs for my favorite Jodi Foster film.
@NoOne-so7jt2 ай бұрын
43:40 Don't forget Ellie's retort: "Funny, I've always believed the world is what we make of it." In other words, the world doesn't have to be that way if we strive to behave morally, instead of being Machiavellian like Drumlin.
@cshubs3 ай бұрын
When you think about it, this is another version of, "If you build, he will come."
@dallesamllhals91613 ай бұрын
Baseball. really? You 'muricans 😛
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
@@dallesamllhals9161 ... Not baseball. The main character dealing with his/her past and missing Dad.
@TheYakusoku3 ай бұрын
23:00 - There's a saying that "Some people prefer a comforting lie over an uncomfortable truth."
@t0dd0003 ай бұрын
The scene where young Eleanor (Jena Malone-man, she was good in this) races to get the medicine is a really famous cinematography shot. There's a great KZbin video on how they did it.
@colinafobe21523 ай бұрын
absolutely adore this film. kudos to Jodie Foster and Tom Skerritt for brilliant acting
@TallBob19623 ай бұрын
When little Ellie talked to the priest she was not blaming herself. She was looking to science as an explanation as rejection of the priest's supernatural explanation.
@zammmerjammer3 ай бұрын
Which ultimately means she was blaming herself. She should have kept a bottle of medicine in the downstairs bathroom -- that's why her father died. Not because of fate or God. Because she didn't get the medicine fast enough.
@Stogie21123 ай бұрын
@@zammmerjammer ... Being a child, she couldn't help but blame herself to some degree. If she had brought him the medicine faster, he may have lived or he may have died anyway. The important part of that scene was that Ellie dismissed the priest's explanation, as it was not based on facts and logic. The look she gave the priest was great. Her face said, "Get your superstitions away from me."
@ChrisCTurner103 ай бұрын
@@Stogie2112From my experience adults blame themselves in these situations at least as much as children- probably more so. It is a way to feel some control when there is none.
@BradSimsCPT3 ай бұрын
Yes,and I love that there's layers to her reaction.
@OldMan_PJ3 ай бұрын
Favorite Jodie Foster movie hands down is "Panic Room" (2002), she stars alongside an 11 year old Kristen Stewart. Hopefully it will be getting a 4K release in the next 12 months, it's been rumored for so long.
@1979video3 ай бұрын
One of my all time favorite movies. It also has one of the most amazing camera shots of all time. AKA the mirror shot.
@token13713 ай бұрын
At that time that fantastic shot had never been filmed.
@CribNotesАй бұрын
I only found out recently the recurring letter C shape in the popcorn spilled on the floor, in Ellie's hand full of dirt at the end, etc....is a tribute to Carl.
@VerowakReactsАй бұрын
Oh that's a subtle but very nice tribute!
@InfoRanker2 ай бұрын
Brilliant movie, written by one of my favorite people of all time. Carl Sagan
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
I sadly haven't read or seen much that Carl Sagan has done. I'll have to fix that
@canadianicedragon24123 ай бұрын
"This is a risk, the occupant could die?" Do you know how many people "almost" dying to reach the moon? Even on Earth. This movie is... very surreal in the best ways.
@herbertkeithmiller19 күн бұрын
A wormhole opens into a point in space-time. You can with super advanced technology select the the spatial coordinates and the time coordinates. The return wormhole was simply set to return her to a point in space and time a moment after she left.
@doctaflo3 ай бұрын
28:45 - “it also makes sense that they have hexagons cuz they’re the bestagons” ~some CGP fan
@echobucket3 ай бұрын
The other shot which people sometimes don't notice because I think shows have imitated it a lot nowadays, but when Ellie is on the radio after her dad dies, it slow pulls back and suddenly we are outside the window as if we just went through the glass.
@DB-zp9un3 ай бұрын
And when the signal is discovered and she runs from outside to the control room
@t0dd0003 ай бұрын
SETI "How do you know that?" SETI is a very real and very well known project.
@dedcowbowee3 ай бұрын
I read this book after buying for my late mother when she was recovering from a serous back surgery. After she was done with it of course. I took her to the theater when this came out, we both thought They did a great job making the movie and your reaction has been excellent!
@akw141-yy3rz2 ай бұрын
zemeckis is known for interesting cinematography. There's a detailed commentary track about the mirror scene on the Contact Special Features DVD. Other less noticeable shots are her running from outside at the VLA to inside the control room, which LOOKS like one continuous shot but is actually several locations, I believe in different states, seamlessly edited into one sequence. Then you have 360 degree pans, which is impossible continuously because of cameras and equipment, cut together, and the fact that literally any time you see the machine it's all CGI on green screen. I like this movie a lot, but I've also seen it more times than it might even deserve because of the stunning visuals and camerawork. The Clinton footage is from actual speeches, one of them regarding finding microbes on Mars. As with Forrest Gump, this is another thing Zemeckis loves to do. He's up there with Kubrick and Spielberg among my favorite directors.
@ronfehr78993 ай бұрын
A suggestion for another Jodie Foster movie: Nell. Great performance.
@adamwarlock13 ай бұрын
I keep hoping reactors will do Nell. Everybody already loves Liam Neeson and Jodie, and I'd love for people to rediscover Natasha Richardson.
@ronfehr78993 ай бұрын
@@lopa-u9fNot a poor movie. Just not to your taste.
@samgradyfilm3 ай бұрын
Oh please don't watch Nell. It does NOT hold up. Embarrassing to watch.
@ronfehr78993 ай бұрын
It looks like some people don't like Nell. Decide for yourself, but maybe just for yourself, and not as a reaction video.
@memnarch1292 ай бұрын
The saddest thing about this movie now, if no one has mentioned, is you can no longer visit the Arecibo telescope. About 2 or 3 years ago one of the cables anchoring the receiver to one of the pillars snaped, after that the weight was too much and a second one snapped and the whole receiver array fell down through the dish. It was figured it would be too expensive to repair and so Arecibo was decomissioned.
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
That is so unfortunate and sad 😭
@miller-joel3 ай бұрын
41:26 The sparkling dirt is the same pattern seen on the popcorn on the floor when her father dies, the poster on her wall at Arecibo, the star system when she goes through the wormhole.
@pistonburner64483 ай бұрын
She doesn't see clearly because she loses a contact lens at some point before she wakes up and sees her father/the alien. That's why the film's name is "Contact".
@miller-joel3 ай бұрын
@@pistonburner6448 Spoilers!!!
@ronbeck2013 ай бұрын
That shape looks like the constellation Corona Borealis, never figured out the meaning of it. Wonder if it is in the book.
@miller-joel3 ай бұрын
@@ronbeck201 The repeating pattern is there to suggest a higher intelligence or design at work, which is funny considering Sagan was an atheist. In the book, he does it by finding a pattern in the number Pi.
@edo272 ай бұрын
One of my fave childhood movies. I love seeing reactors get more and more enraged at Drumlin lol
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
Damn that guy!! 😠
@zhollamychalis42523 ай бұрын
might I suggest,,,soundtrack wise...Silvestri at the end of :the movie Shattered: with Tom Berenger...as the helicopter begins to move away.. Probably my single fav Silvestri moment. Movie's good too. Cheers!
@lazyperfectionist1Ай бұрын
18:44 _This_ is why, even though they tried millions of permutations, they could never get more than three of them to fit. They were trying to make it work in _two_ dimensions and it was designed to work in _three._ _That's_ why no more than three of them fit. If you're working in three dimensions, three is all you _need_ to fit.
@flippert03 ай бұрын
22:07 you are not wrong about "Forrest Gump". Composer for Contact is Alan Silvestri and he created the OST for "Forrest Gump" as well (and for many more movies)
@FrancisXLord3 ай бұрын
Robert Zemeckis had an unblemished reputation as a director between Romancing The Stone (1984) and The Polar Express (2004) - every film he directed was a hit during those two decades. He also contributed so much to the development of visual effects during that period. Often he includes what I would call 'thankless effects shots', as in the audience is entirely oblivious that there is a visual effect. For instance, did you notice when Ellie runs into the observatory going right from the street to what was actually a set all in one shot? I'll bet you missed that. His films also pioneered composited crowd scenes - before Forrest Gump if you wanted a gazillion people on screen you had to hire a gazillion extras. The impossible shots in What Lies Beneath (2000) were also very innovative and impressive for the time. I notice you haven't reacted to that Zemeckis film. Might I suggest you check it out at some point.
@larrybremer49303 ай бұрын
Forrest Gump had the most SFX shots in a movie at the time, and its so seamless that its completely unnoticed.
@BonniBarlow-fn6oj3 ай бұрын
There's a behind the scenes video - or it may be commentary on a separate track of the movie with Jodie talking about how they did many of those scenes - the one where she's running into the office with that long shot was filmed in several different locations. The real "contact" happened at the end with Ellie and Joss touching each other's hands in the limo.
@ThistleAndSea3 ай бұрын
Love this one. Thanks for sharing it, Verowak. 🙂
@kennyteeology35263 ай бұрын
You got it! Same composer as Forrest Gump. Alan Silvestri
@alalcoolj2163 ай бұрын
A cool extra bit of detail on that mirror shot is that the set with the stairway was built twice - mirror images of each other (why have one set when you can have two at twice the cost). They used the mirror-image reversed version for the mirror shot, so that everything in the mirror is correctly backwards from how it is seen at other times.
@stackels973 ай бұрын
'Anna and the King' is a crazy underappreciated Jodi Foster film. She and Chow Yun-Fat are incredible in it and there's a baby Tom Felton tagging along too. It's so rare that modern remakes and adaptations do some justice to the previous versions but that one was such a pleasant surprise. 😊
@robertbunting31173 ай бұрын
'Silence of the Lambs' should definitely be put somewhere on your list of movies that are a must see. Jodie Foster is awesome in it and it's a great movie.
@asmrhead15603 ай бұрын
Can I just say I love that you picked up on the start of the movie with the radio "time travel" at the speed of light? A surprising number of reactors totally miss it.
@arthurcamargo84163 ай бұрын
A Krasnikov Tube can do exactly what the device did in this movie. It constructs a wormhole and brings you back through the same tunnel to the very moment you started the tunnel or entered it. In reality, though, the tunnel needs to be constructed as you go, which means it could only go at the speed of the ship that is creating it.... Many people like sci fi for the possibilities. But the best stories are set in sci fi worlds, while the human conditions are explored within those settings. That is what made Twilight Zone so compelling, for example, or even Black Mirror. They were not necessarily about the tech or science, but about the humans within the context of that! The best fantasy stories as well! Great reaction! Fun!
@Ultracity60602 ай бұрын
7:45 Looks like she's about to become a... **puts on sunglasses** ...Foster child. _YEEEEAAAAAAAHHHHH!_
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
🤣Good one, I like it!!!
@fortunatus13 ай бұрын
There is one hole in addition to the static in the idea that the trip is all in Ellie's mind. She was strapped into the seat when the capsule fell and the seat was smashed to pieces in what they believe was a split second fall - massive gravitational effect. Could she have gotten out of the seat in that time when the camera blinked out and the capsule was released? Seems unlikely. Should they have detected such a massive gravitational effect?
@WilliamScavengerFish3 ай бұрын
A plothole deeper than crater lake.
@ts46083 ай бұрын
The back-up shot into the bathroom mirror IS trippy!!
@manic60303 ай бұрын
Masterpiece! (the movie, the music and your reaction!)
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
Thank you!!! 😁
@3DJapan3 ай бұрын
7:14 This film came out when I was in film school and we studied this scene.
@dabe19713 ай бұрын
7:31 Love waiting for the mirror shot reaction every time !
@cjmacq-vg8um3 ай бұрын
"contact" is so good i added the dvd to my dvd collection. and i have films from every year from 1896 to 2007. my only criticisms of the film would be her little space excursion is way too short and the film has 3 false endings. i think that's gotta be some kind of record. thanks for the video smiley.
@cjmacq-vg8um3 ай бұрын
i can suggest many excellent sci-fi films. don't put too much faith in silly on-line polls. some people just have horrible taste. "colossus: the forbin project" (1970) is a perfect example of sci-fi predicting the dystopian future in which we now find ourselves. check it out. its EXCELLENT!
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
I'm amazed that you have films from every year from 1896 to 2007, that's very impressive! Do you have a favourite decade for movies?
@cjmacq-vg8um3 ай бұрын
@@VerowakReacts ... i have more films from 1939 and 1967 than any other single years. so i guess the 30s and the 60s would be my favorite decades for film. hitchcock, spielberg, capra and ford are the directors, in order, of whom i have the most films. bogart is the actor of whom i have the most films and jimmy stewart is a close 2nd. i try to promote older films as much as i can. sadly silent films are never viewed by reactors and there's some GREAT, absolutely remarkable silent films out there. some are EPICS and some are "small," charming films. all my dvds from 1896 to about 1912 are from one film maker named georges méliès. i have his complete works. his films range in length from 10 to 30 minutes. he created some fantastic special effects techniques still used today. sorry for the length of my reply.
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
@@cjmacq-vg8um Some movies are also hard to come by, and usually buying a dvd of every movie isn't feasible for reactors. The older movies that I have seen have mostly been really enjoyable! No need to be sorry at all, I love seeing people be passionate about something!
@jamesalexander56233 ай бұрын
I've been to the VLA. I ran into it by accident driving from New Mexico back to Arizona! You can actually tour it and see where they filmed!
@jt-ph1ox3 ай бұрын
Hey Verowak. This is the first time seeing a reaction from you........Well done. U r the first person I've seen to make the connection between Robert Zemekis and Alan Silvestri. I started my love and interest in movie soundtracks when I saw Romancing the Stone in 1984. To keep a long story short, I talked twice on the phone with Alan because of that movie. It turns out we are the same age. He was very generous and told me that his next project soon to be released was a movie called Back to the Future. He went into the studio and made a tape for me along with a note. I cherish it to this day. He went on to have a brilliant career. I love the guy's music. Thanks for making that connection. Bravo!
@WilliamScavengerFish3 ай бұрын
40:28 the fact that interests me is why wasn’t the fact that the chair was broken was not in the confidential report. Why didn’t Palmer Joss speak up?
@HammershotSGD3 ай бұрын
“The world is what we make it”
@dragonhawkeclouse22643 ай бұрын
the actor who plays the father (David Morse) plays in a bunch of other movies mostly, i have only seen him as a villain, but between this movie, and one other, "Hearts in Atlantis", these are two great movies which he isn't a bad guy Hearts in Atlantis is also an Anthony Hopkins movie......terrific movie
@markhackett23023 ай бұрын
Moore is in The Green Mile.
@jonathanross1493 ай бұрын
RIP Arecibo
@seantlewis3763 ай бұрын
Carl Sagan was a Cosomologist, a studier of everything, though his focus was on astrophysics. One thing that bugs me about every introduction to this movie is that everyone says the book was written by Carl Sagan without mentioning Ann Druyan, his co-author and wife. The credit on the book is "Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan". In addition to being an essay on what may happen, it is a representation of how women in science are treated by their peers. It has always been true, and is true today. I am a member of SETI. Not an active scientist, but part of the crowdsourcing who will download a screensaver program to take up the extra cycles of their personal computer to help process the mountains of data provided by the project.
@edselroad3 ай бұрын
Vega was actually the first, blue star system the pod stopped at (where she saw the rails of the transport system); she was then moved to another system
@lazyperfectionist1Ай бұрын
Carl Sagan was a very good writer, too. He was a _brilliant_ astrophysicist who worked for NASA, but I would say that probably his _greatest_ contribution was as a popularizer of _science._ I am, of course, bragging when I say that in my day I have read many books. A lot of them (especially toward the beginning) were very entertaining, but a lot of them have also been very informative and instructional, and probably the _most_ informative and instructional was a book _he_ wrote: _The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark._ The main selling point for _this_ book is Chapter 12. _The Fine Art of Baloney Detection._ This is where Dr. Sagan introduces what he calls "the baloney-detection kit," probably because this title is catchier than "the scientific method,_ but then he details 20 examples of what his experience had shown him are the most frequently used Logical Fallacies. This was an _incredibly_ insightful thing to read, because over the years, several of them had taken me in. They were responsible for _years_ of _terrible confusion_ any time a big decision lay before me.
@sntxrrr3 ай бұрын
Still the best first contact movie ever made. Epic and reasonably scientifically plausible. That medicine cabinet shot is legendary. Robert Zemeckis did a lot to advance SFX, not always successfully but often right on the edge of what was possible.
@The1Music2MyEars3 ай бұрын
27:07 this is why score is sooo important in movies. The score here gives off a sense of wonderment and a hint of cosmic horror as she is both joyful for hope not being lost but scared since she knows she has to take the trip herself after previous incidents and into another reality.
@lazyperfectionist1Ай бұрын
30:03 Oh. There's nothing hexagonal about that shape. That's one of the five platonic solids called the dodecahedron because it has 12 faces.
@lawrencewestby92293 ай бұрын
The relationship between Ellie and David Drumlin may have been inspired by the real life story of Jocelyn Bell and Antony Hewish. In 1967, Bell was a post graduate researcher at Cambridge and Hewitt was her thesis advisor. During her research Bell discovered a repeating radio signal that eventually was determined to be the first case of a pulsar, a rapidly rotating neutron star, to be discovered. When the paper announcing the discovery of pulsars was published the first name on the authors listed was Hewish's with Bell being second. In 1974 Hewish was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of pulsars with Bell not being included. The awarding of the prize to only Hewish (Martin Ryle was also awarded the prize that year but for different research) was, and remains to this day, a controversial decision. One other note, some astronomers jokingly called the radio sources LGMs, i.e. Little Green Men.
@NickRedstar3 ай бұрын
The characterization of Ellie Arroway was inspired by Jill Tarter, head of Project Phoenix of the SETI Institute
@token13713 ай бұрын
*My favorite Jodie Foster movie and performance.* Imo, her acting range is awesome. As Shepard Book said "I don't care what you believe .. *JUST BELIEVE".*
@glasgowjohn78313 ай бұрын
aw ffs this movie gets me going as it is with out you bringing in shepherds books death
@zmarko3 ай бұрын
LOVE this movie. Love Carl Sagan, also. The opening sequence was amazing to see at the theater (i saw it 3 times at the theater). Hope you enjoy this one!
@jakobfromthefence3 ай бұрын
So… Running Ellie is considered by many authorities to be the best shot in history of cinema.
@Snowman291019633 ай бұрын
I love your reactions, they are both intellectual and emotional at the same time. 😄
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
Thank you! It's a mix of everything 😂
@JeffreyCantelope3 ай бұрын
Some Random thoughts: The Haddon plane interview remined me of a scene from the 1967 UK show The Prisoner & The VLA is a cool place to visit.
@teddtarr3 ай бұрын
Carl S., after de-bunking several of the more prominent UFO theories of the day (very early 80's), concluded by saying that ( in order to be taken seriously), extraordinary claims demand extraordinary proofs. In other comments, he seemed to strongly imply that he regarded past & present mystical belief systems ( those that attempt to explain the natural world through supernatural causes) as pretty much at the top of the list of extraordinary claims. However, he was also a subscriber to the principle that 'the absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence; i.e., just because you can't prove something exists, does not necessarily prove that it doesn't. Taking both of these concepts to heart is the basis of my Agnosticism, the doctrine that humans cannot know of the existence of anything beyond the phenomenon of their experience. -- it seems to be the only rational approach to those things that have to be accepted on the basis of blind faith ( sometimes defined as belief in the unbelievable.)
@CB-ju4mz3 ай бұрын
I miss Carl Sagan’s hope for humanity. The original cosmos tv series is a masterpiece.
@RebelCowboysRVs3 ай бұрын
The mirror shot was done In Harry Potter, when they were learning to fight bogarts. In it you pass the class looking in the mirror, pass through the mirror an the class is in front of you.
@-iIIiiiiiIiiiiIIIiiIi-3 ай бұрын
Whenever I watch a Jodie Foster movie, it always reminds me that Brad Dourif has never played her brother in a movie. 😞
@little-wytch3 ай бұрын
I caught that CGP Grey reference... Hexagons are indeed the bestagons lol. Great reaction.
@mithroch3 ай бұрын
The opening sequence always reminds me of a short anime movie called Voices of a Distant Star. It's about two friends/lovers, one of which is traveling away from earth. Their messages to each other, first have delay of a few hours, then days and eventually years... a really beautiful piece.
@Alexandrashepiro3 ай бұрын
Such a great movie! I grew up watching Sagan's Cosmos in the early 80s. So I got all this science!
@NativeNewMexican3 ай бұрын
YES! Finally a reactor that catches how awesome it was to have a camera going backwards, up stairs, turning a corner, then into and then facing the mirror that Ellie runs to. IIRC Carl Sagan and CS Lewis would have discussions about religion and science which led to things like "do you love your father, prove it" and other faith/science questions written in the source for the movie. For other Science theory adaptations into art, you might listen to The Greatest Show on Earth by Nightwish which takes Dawkins' writings and puts them into song form.
@waynet10223 ай бұрын
I read the book before the movie came out and I thought it was great. There was something interesting going on with Pi.
@dirtyhawkstv15753 ай бұрын
23:18 You called it, asked for it and you got it. Drumlin's death.
@THEvagabond293 ай бұрын
This is another i read the book first then watched the movie my first year in college. It was Mann Theatres boulder, CO and the line went around the building. Great film and im in the same seat as ellie, a person of science among religion.
@willcool7133 ай бұрын
The book is really very good, imo. I expected it to be notably academic and was inclined to be charitable, but expected overly rational hyberbole. I was surprised. It plays well with virtually all World metaphysics and carries such breadth to a significant depth, clearly speaking to a universal experience of the divine.
@zeph0shade2 ай бұрын
To this day this is the only movie I've seen James Woods live acting in. Whenever he speaks I only hear Hades.
@kevdoe33603 ай бұрын
James Woods was brilliant in "Videodrome"!
@memphistim20013 ай бұрын
Liked him better when he was just playing a reactionary tool.
@mikeshoe743 ай бұрын
He's usually playing an unlikable character.
@adamwarlock13 ай бұрын
@@mikeshoe74 Yeah his worst guy ever might be in Casino, and he's the best out of a stacked cast doing their best work.
@kylethompson30083 ай бұрын
He plays a badass vampire hunter
@kevdoe33603 ай бұрын
@@kylethompson3008, right. I totally forgot about that movie!
@TPBurrow3 ай бұрын
We have never met, but KZbin brought me here and I really enjoyed this reaction so I subbed so I can get to know you better ♥
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
Welcome! The algorithm works in mysterious ways 😂
@johnnyrocketed22253 ай бұрын
Composer was Alan Silvestri- same as Forest Gump. Nice call. 🤓
@segaiuolo3 ай бұрын
I wish they didn't add that "18 hours of static" part: the movie would have been 100% perfect
@Kevonutube3033 ай бұрын
What a fabulous watch!!! Knew this would be a great source of fascination, interest, and belief for you. Excellent reaction. Thank you so much, for being you and allowing me, (us) to view this wonderful movie for the first time, again. Can't wait for the next one. Oh yeah, you did ask..... "Silence of the Lambs" is a phenomenal movie that Jodi Foster stars along with Sir Anthony Hopkins. Just one of her amazing accomplishments.
@srahhh3 ай бұрын
I forgot how beautiful this movie is :'( Carl Sagan writing about an alien species trying so hard to communicate with us in the same way he tried to communicate with them, throwing out signals to anything that might be intelligent enough to understand the basic laws of the universe (prime numbers)
@milthopper6780Ай бұрын
The fact that you picked up on science and religion together and they both are in the pursuit of truth is great, because it is correct. We as the human race should all be in the pursuit of truth.🙂
@coreyhendricks94903 ай бұрын
One of Robert Zemeckis' masterpieces ever made since Forest Gump, cool reaction Vero and congratulations on 30k subs 🥰❤️👍
@VerowakReacts3 ай бұрын
He is a director that I really enjoy, I'll have to watch his other movies that I haven't seen yet :D And that you!!
@coreyhendricks94903 ай бұрын
@@VerowakReacts You should see Forest Gump down the road, you'll love it
@VerowakReacts2 ай бұрын
@@coreyhendricks9490 You mean like this one? kzbin.info/www/bejne/m3rMnoCmhMp8mLs :D
@coreyhendricks94902 ай бұрын
@@VerowakReacts Absolutely
@coreyhendricks94902 ай бұрын
It's already on your channel, that's cool, you have a great weekend 🥰❤️😊🌹
@jonathanross1493 ай бұрын
There are a few changes in the book and of course more details.