the alien sound is actually a rock song by the sick puppies kzbin.info/www/bejne/opq6Xp6Ne86LqrM
@NemorisInferioris6 жыл бұрын
Dan -Horsenwelles- Williams I just realized that. Great song btw
@jacobv84475 жыл бұрын
Seriously
@VII07775 жыл бұрын
Dude, overlaying the narration from The Color on the movie footage gave me chills. You've nailed a key source of inspiration for this amazing movie.
@seaque. Жыл бұрын
This video was on my Watch later playlist for a very long time, at least 3 years. So much that it was the cover thumbnail of the playlist. I shouldn't have wait this long, this is really amazing and shows even 5 years ago Thomas used to put unique perspective into films he's talking about, the right kind of video essay.
@zamardii124 жыл бұрын
The music of Annihilation made up literally 50% of the way I feel about it... it's hauntingly appropriate. I love Alex Garland's stuff...
@storytellers16 жыл бұрын
You weren't lying when you said that your interpretation would be completely different from ours. Love films that do that, although it seems as if a lot of viewers did not appreciate that about Annihilation... Some interpretations indeed leave the end feeling kind of weak. I do dig the alien Adam & Eve interpretation but still believe the psychological Jungian view is the most impactful. Good stuff fellow Thomas - T
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
I ended up taking the line out of the essay, but at one point in an early draft I called Annihilation a "Rorschach Test of a movie" and I really think it is. It lays out this great narrative that, as you pointed out, draws from archetypes, and people are able to map their interpretations onto the story. Almost like a shared dream, viewers come away from the viewing each finding meaning where it's relevant to them.
@marilyn35836 жыл бұрын
Another movie that was panned by critics, believe it or not, was 2001 A Space Odyssey.
@rottensquid6 жыл бұрын
@@marilyn3583 I still see a lot of very conventional film fans shake their heads in contempt of 2001. "Totally overrated," they say, as though their failure to understand the film must be the fault of the film. That said, I'm sure we've all written off at least one movie because we completely missed the point.
@ulfingvar13 жыл бұрын
@@marilyn3583 Annihilation was NOT panned, it was met mostly with positive reviews and quite a lot of raves. This film will grow in stature, and indeed this is what is happening right now! It is a masterpiece and future analysis will point this out more and more.
@ArifGhostwriter2 жыл бұрын
@@ThomasFlight I like this - 'Watch this movie. What did you just see? Excellent - that tells me so much about you.'
@kbucket6 жыл бұрын
I loved this film, just a great breath of fresh air. I know you can dig real deep into metaphor with this film but what I took most profoundly from this film was it's commentary on self-destruction, I'm only in my early 20's but I've struggled with depression and addiction for awhile and this film spoke to that side of me. I found the idea that the shimmer was both horrifying and yet had such a weird beauty to it reminded me of how I feel when I think back on my depression/anxiety and a self-destructive nature - cause mental illness does kind of feel like a cancer of the spirit, just growing & rotting you form inside until you get to the core. I don't know if I articulated that well at all, & probably sounds pretentious, it's hard to explain but this film was a treat.
@ArifGhostwriter2 жыл бұрын
A fantastic post, analysis & commentary buddy! 👍🏽👍🏽
@RoshenCarman5 жыл бұрын
"we may have to learn to live with our inability to explain what we experience" I love that line, Thomas. I think our need to explain that we experience is part of our need to feel connected to each other. Especially when a movie confronts us with questions we don't know how to answer. It feels lonely, or a bit frightening in a way. And in not being able to answer, sometimes we blame the movie for asking bad questions, lol.
@ArifGhostwriter2 жыл бұрын
Lonely, frightening, eery - Under the Skin (Scarlett Johanssen) gave me this exact feeling as well. I don't think there's even a word to describe how it reached into me & affected me.
@mthggg4 жыл бұрын
Annihilation has become one of my favourite films of all time. It's so smart and well made. I remember the first time I watched it I felt like I was in some sort of trance almost as if I was experiencing some kind of trippy feeling
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
Then do yourself a favour and try Andrei Tarkovsky's films "Solaris" and "Stalker" next. They don't have this kind of colourful CGI, but they are also very medidative and trippy, and the director uses a lot of nature's imagery to create an inexplicable sense of wonder. Much like H.P. Lovecraft's story "The Colour Out of Space", the source material for "Solaris" (by Stanisław Lem) and "Stalker" (Arkadi & Boris Strugatsky's "Roadside Picnic") deals with alien(-influenced) landscapes that have an inexplicable psycho-physical effect on humankind.
@africanhistory2 жыл бұрын
@@elfsieben1450 Even the newer version of Solaris.
@africanhistory2 жыл бұрын
Statements like this instantly tell me you cannot be serious about cinema. It is like in a discussion of music telling me Drake last album is the best in music history! You cannot be serious.
@roboldx91712 жыл бұрын
@@elfsieben1450 The original Solaris is a masterpiece.
@shamiir1812 Жыл бұрын
The whole movie is dreamy, it's one of the best sci-fi movies ever made.
@ulfingvar15 жыл бұрын
Annihilation is one of the best films of the past two decades, of ANY genre: revolutionary, challenging, provocative, stunningly visual and almost, if we are open to it, altering our consciousness, at least while watching it. That it was distributed so poorly is a fucking disgrace, but time will assure this film is given a status of absolute CLASSIC! and put it alongside titles such as 2001 and Blade Runner.
@africanhistory2 жыл бұрын
The film is crap. The casting is crap. You must be talking about some other film. Only two women in that group are memorable. The rest are all the same forgetable. So how can It be gone if the casting is so bad?
@Physics_Dude Жыл бұрын
Annihilation was both refreshing and disturbing. That bear scene was more troubling for me than the Alien dinner scene and Ash scene combined. I have been an avid sci-fi fan for decades. The 2000s have brought us so many classics. Interstellar, Another Earth, Bladerunner 2049, Arrival, Ex Machina, and many more. But all tugged at our sophomoric expectations instead of challenging us. Annihilation, however, set aside for me what it means to be human and instead questioned everything I thought I knew. And then exposed my fears. Then after exposing them, they pulled them out and exposed them to tyranny. Yes, Interstellar was probably my favorite sci-fi of the 2000s. But Annihilation is right there with it.
@Defeat_MAGA Жыл бұрын
@@africanhistory - it's okay if you don't understand this film and expose yourself for how clueless you are. If you need a hug, let us know. Go back to watching some DC, Marvel, or other superhero waste of film. Or maybe you prefer crap films like Mad Max Fury Road, Forrest Gump, and Saving Private Ryan. Or maybe The Godfather. Suck an egg.
@ulfingvar1 Жыл бұрын
@@africanhistory Well, you are entitled to your opinions, but not only do I disagree, the characters being "memorable" in the traditional sense isn't even the point.
@ulfingvar1 Жыл бұрын
@@Physics_Dude Word!
@schodes6 жыл бұрын
Great vid, brother. Perfectly paced and well-written.
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Will!
@Jiraiyashouse66610 ай бұрын
The BEAR SCENE SHOCKED me to my core because it made me relive a moment I had convinced myself was some strange psychotic break... some fluke of my imagination. I was archery hunting for Elk in the Strawberry Mountains and tracking a cow elk(female elk) I just shot. I tracked it deep into a thicket, it was so thick that even though it was only 3pm, it looked like the sun had just set. Minutes passed and as descended into the a ravine, It got darker and even thicker and I was afraid I was going to lose the wounded animal. Just as I was about to give up, I heard an very distinct child like female voice whimper..."Why did you kill me?" It chilled me to the core and my hair felt as if it could generate lightning. I looked in the direction of the voice and I could swear I saw a hairless figure laying in some brush. I looked again, trying to focus and then heard..."Help me". I cautiously went towards the figure and could see it was an animal... and from the smell long dead. Its fur had fallen away in large patches. I stared at it for a moment... then I swore I saw its body rise as if it was taking a breath. I ran a 3 minute mile back to camp... packed my gear and ran the 6 miles out of the area in the dark. The bear scene brought that all back.
@A777KАй бұрын
omg, that is unreal, but I believe you.We do live in a strange universe
@LRBeforeTheInternet6 жыл бұрын
I've always been a fan of the unknowable threat trope found in the works of H. P. Lovecraft and i appreciate that this film draws it's inspiration from those stories, but the best scene in this film has to be when the bear creature is screaming in one of it's victims voices. One of the best horror scenes i've seen in years. :)
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
I will agree that is probably the best scene from a filmmaking standpoint. Just raw terror created so well through sound design and production design without a jump scare or anything. I also absolutely love the way the scene on the camcorder followed by the pool scene unfolds. It's so perfectly structured to make it feel like area x is closing in on the characters.
@hanniffydinn60196 жыл бұрын
ƁᴇғᴏʀᴇƮʜᴇļɴᴛᴇʀɴᴇᴛ honestly I was more amazed by the real lyrebird, that mimics sounds perfectly .... Search for it. These things exist in the real world.
@gregcyr6 жыл бұрын
The bear scene was the worst. 1. What happened to the bear's own throat? And why just the throat, why not steal her thumbs to use her gun? 2. Does the bear do this *all* the time? Does it rip out and use the larynx of everything it eats? Every deer, rabbit and stray pet? 3. When did the bear learn English? How did it pick out those phrases as meaningful, as opposed to everything else she said? Makes bugger all sense.
@LRBeforeTheInternet6 жыл бұрын
+Smeghead McSmeg "What happened to the bear's own throat? And why just the throat, why not steal her thumbs to use her gun?" You're assuming that's all that was changed and that the bear creature had a choice as to what can be changed about itself. "Does the bear do this all the time? Does it rip out and use the larynx of everything it eats? Every deer, rabbit and stray pet?" We can only assume. "When did the bear learn English? How did it pick out those phrases as meaningful, as opposed to everything else she said?" Even more assumptions. "Makes bugger all sense." I agree, your line of questioning makes no sense at all.
@gregcyr6 жыл бұрын
ƁᴇғᴏʀᴇƮʜᴇļɴᴛᴇʀɴᴇᴛ With no internally consistent rules for the "shimmer", it's just deus ex machina. Absolutely anything can happen and, "It's the shimmer", is all the explanation you need. Dead come back to life? Shimmer. Portman has a wank and squirts rainbows out of her ass? Shimmer! That's just lazy story writing.
@renee_33646 жыл бұрын
Great video. Annihilation is one of my favourite movies of recent years and I think you really articulated what I loved about it. That feeling of “not being able to explain/express what you experienced” is something that most people will encounter at some point in life and this movie does a great job of bringing that feeling across in my opinion.
@minkitty85005 жыл бұрын
I read lovecraft's "the colour out of space" first. And when I watched "Annihilation" I instantly thought it has to be connected. Thank you for confirming this!
@jacobv84475 жыл бұрын
hell of a revelation, right.
@daniel_netzel6 жыл бұрын
Totally agree, fortunately I was one that it worked on, beautifully I might add. But I think it's hard for some to accept that there will just be some films that don't do the trick for them, and want some hard answers that they'll likely never find.
@R-Batty3 жыл бұрын
TRUE to me ! The mystery has to be kept untill each viewer / reader / listenner find his own interpretative way , maturing along the years . Annihilation his still living in many minds i think ( i think about a beautifull deep Adult SF serie : Raised by wolves also ) . By the way , what did you do on the project ? ps : apologise for my "froggy" english !
@crozraven6 жыл бұрын
This is the best Annihilation movie analysis I found on KZbin so far. great work.
@witheredleaves90016 жыл бұрын
Finally the link I was looking for. References to Lovecraft's work were so obvious to me and I felt so disappointed that nobody mentioned or even noticed them before! This video is extremely satisfying.
@sethwoodhouse47976 жыл бұрын
Great video. When Annihilation came out I got to go to a screening of the film with director Alex Garland and I got to ask him a question about this very same thing: his influences. He described his influences as an amalgamation of all the things that he has read or watched including Apocalypse Now, Stalker, and Alien. He's brilliant. Can definitely see Lovecraft as well in it.
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
I suspect the Lovecraft influences may have been more direct on the book, and therefore also the movie, even if it wasn’t an immediate influence on Garland.
@erickillian3132 жыл бұрын
Well well done sir. Love that you captured what was in my head but couldnt say about the film. Thank you for this, seriously.
@panicsum6 жыл бұрын
Great video and analysis. Around three years ago I had a life changing experience with DMT that has left me with a profound feeling of being changed in a way that's impossible to convey. Watching this film was almost like revisiting that place. I have absolutely no doubt that for a few minutes I was connected to something not of this known world. We are so limited, but our ego struggles with that fact and tries to frame itself as the centre of the universe, when in reality we are simply clueless to our whereabouts. Our origins and even our supposed reality?
@Hellmarch1236 жыл бұрын
panicsum where did u get DMT?
@panicsum6 жыл бұрын
In true McKenna fashion, it found me.
@ImVeryOriginal3 ай бұрын
One of my favorite Sci-Fi movies ever made. Viewers who expect a conventional plot or story firmly rooted in scientific possibility will be disappointed, but for me, it continues the tradition of introspective, existential, psychedelic Sci-Fi in the vein of 2001: A Space Odyssey. I've been through some deeply personal and emotional psychedelic experiences, and the finale beautifully captures these feelings of awe, confusion, terror and exhilaration that come from a confrontation with one's Self.
@TekGeekHD6 жыл бұрын
Not going to lie, this movie fucked me up when I watched it. This was an excellent video essay!
@abuferasabdullah5 жыл бұрын
TekGeekHD but it was a really bad movie
@RemedyUnderTheSun3 жыл бұрын
@@abuferasabdullah The beauty of the world building saved it a little, but yeah the story structure kinda sucked.
@vsauce46782 жыл бұрын
The song at the end “The alien” is one of the best pieces of music I’ve ever heard in a film. It’s is the definition of how I feel when I had the dread of the unknown or the fear of what’s behind me or around the next corner.
@Mattyr9516 жыл бұрын
There are echoes of The Crystal World by JG Ballard in this movie. Undoubtedly, it has influenced Alex Garland in making the film as he has borrowed the names of characters from the novel, (Ventress, Thorensen). Well worth a read for those wishing to further explore the themes of the movie.
@tiagocosmos6 жыл бұрын
awesome analysis! The Colour Out of Space is one of my favorites (Huge Lovecraft fan here). This movie is the closest thing to an adaptation of that story we'll ever get and i think in that, it does it great justice.
@Aeon2Flux6 жыл бұрын
Tiago Soares What about the film classic The Curse , starring Wil Wheaton? The movie has a beat by beat telling of the book, and it's not even credited by the movie at all...
@andrewkawam26035 жыл бұрын
What about Richard Stanley's new film with Nicolas Cage?
@enriquediazgarcia75526 жыл бұрын
No one is going to mention Roadside picnic influence in Annihilation?? The “zone”, alien encounter and the fact that two beings can’t comprehend each other or understand that they are facing one another, the inexplicable anomalies
@ThomasBruceClayton4 жыл бұрын
Well said, Roadside Picnic is definitely the first novel I thought of when I watched it.
@adamant55503 жыл бұрын
Yep, I immediately thought of that (and Tarkovsky's Stalker) while watching this. The Zone shares many similarities with The Shimmer.
@jd34096 жыл бұрын
Superb interpretation, Thomas. Much more thought provoking than other reviews I've watched. The film is very captivating. One that gets better the more you see it; I'm not one to watch a movie more than once in most instances. The film is genius and is supportive of the view that alien, intelligent life may be totally unrecognizable to us if and when contact is made. Perhaps not the most popular, but I feel the best of Alex Garland's extraordinary work.
@eggydrums6 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. This movie made me feel things I couldn’t describe. It was a completely overwhelming experience that I firmly believe only film can provide. In regards to your analysis, maybe we’ve been conditioned to gauge our enjoyment of a film based solely on its plot? Whenever a movie like Annihilation comes around, that does not conform to conventions of storytelling in film, then it becomes polarizing (as you mentioned in the video). Take for example the second season of Mr. Robot, it did have many episodes that pushed the overarching story forward but for the most part, it was just episodes of introspection within the protagonist’s mind and at times it actually felt “hard” to watch. I felt the same with Annihilation at times. But just like Mr. Robot managed to do it (at least for me), Annihilation pushed forward with its vision and incredible production and it ended up being a compelling experience.
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
If you want that genuinely cinematic, overwhelming experience only films can provide, check out Panos Cosmatos' "Mandy", whose effect goes way beyond plot, and whose stylistics also make reference to the psychedelic experience in a meaningful way.
@caffeinepuppy6 жыл бұрын
The Lovecraft story parallels are new to me, and your video does an excellent job of presenting them. I think they mesh well with a realization I had recently, that the shimmer’s incomprehensibility is mutual. It’s an exploration of our universe from somewhere so incomprehensible that the shimmer, its perceptions and knowledge being grounded in that unknowable other, has no basis for understanding our universe. Having some ability to manipulate our universe, the shimmer is applying the fundamental process of learning language: mimicking/repeating words, altering them, combining them. It’s doing this in an attempt to understand our universe and make contact, and it’s applying it at all sorts of different scales. From the chemical makeup of DNA, to body parts, to whole organisms, it’s treating all of these things and more as potential mediums of communication and trying to learn through interaction, trying to discover if there are even beings in this universe that could be communicated with. I don’t think the shimmer understood the nature/scale/context of what constitutes a being in our universe until the ending.
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
That's the greatest take on "Annihilation" I have come across yet! (Also, at its core, it's like a reversal of Stanisław Lem's novel "Solaris", where humanity - over decades - tries to "read" and communicate with a [seemingly?] "expressive", possibly conscious planet, trying out all kinds of scientific and even military methods in order to learn how it "ticks".)
@meganizm0114 жыл бұрын
I really like your ending idea with a new Adam and Eve. I thought that made perfect sense and honestly made me feel a little closer to understanding this movie.
@ruslanrautiola7791 Жыл бұрын
The reason I love this movie is because it is one of very few or perhaps the only one that shows how aliens would be completely different than us rather than something we could be buddy buddy with
@saraseveryn86506 ай бұрын
The Endless
@JonathanWymer6 жыл бұрын
Incredible job! Really loved this essay a lot. Annihilation was one of my favorite movies that I've seen recently. I really tried to dig into the subtext and read into the narrative between Lena and Kane. I see it as almost as analogous with Biblical stories about marriage and self-destruction.
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
That's what I love about this movie, so much going on and so many ways to can see meaning in it that aren't competing with the other interpretations. Spoilers -- You could read the film as being almost entirely about their relationship. She goes in to "rescue him" and right a wrong, and she ends up destroying some part of herself, and whatever part that is... is what allows them to be reunited.
@blakeprecythe16496 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video, I have been dying to see a quality video discussing the parallels of annihilation and the color out of space.
@jacobv84475 жыл бұрын
This is my most favorite movie analysis I have come across. This is seriously beyond beautiful. Bravo.
@gordonmarshall59806 жыл бұрын
Great vid. Though I think you have missed out what imo is the primary inspiration - "Roadside Picnic" by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky (and the film adaptation "Stalker" by Andrei Tarkovsky).
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
Another inspiration would be Stanisław Lem's "Solaris", in which an alien landscape - much like a continental/global maritime/volcanic "Rorschach test lava lamp" - brings first abstract alien shapes & forms, but also such mirroring or seemingly mocking earthly phenomena, and later visitors' fantasies, memories & traumata into concrete being without any scientific explanation found despite decades of research. This novel has also been adapted to film, first by Andrei Tarkovsky and later by Steven Soderbergh.
@gordonmarshall59803 жыл бұрын
@@elfsieben1450 not seen the film but I’ve read the novel. It’s very good.
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
@@gordonmarshall5980 Yes, it is! The novel goes deeper than both film adaptations which focus on Kelvin's mission and the return plot around his wife. The films are still awesome in their own right, however. I believe that the entire "Solaris" could well be made into a mini-series.
@jacobv84474 жыл бұрын
This may be my absolute favorite video on KZbin. Bravo my friend, bravo.
@russelsheartinacage Жыл бұрын
The lighthouse scene is one of my favourite moments of cinema in recent years. And I think the importance of Ben Salisbury and Geoff Barrow's music cannot be underestimated (they all composed the music for Ex Machina and a lot of the music from DEVS, and Geoff is also a member of the trip hop group Portishead)
@roel.vinckens4 жыл бұрын
Tarkovsky's Stalker and Solaris come to mind. As do some experiences with Ayahuasca and Yopo (Anadenanthera peregrina). My NDE at the age of 11 transcended all of this. Beautiful rendering of a beautiful interpretation. Thanks.
@christianandersen35885 жыл бұрын
Finally someone suggested the psychedelic aspect and influence! I read the Southern Reach Trilogy, and even just from reading into this beautiful story, I couldn't help but notice some influence from the psychedelic world. The movie did a pretty good job at depicting Area X even though it seems almost impossible. I really liked your video and you had a cool analysis. Keep it up !
@R-Batty3 жыл бұрын
GREAT CHANNEL ! Serious , calm , good voice , great analyzes subjetcs and reviews ! Thanks from France ;)
@ephemeraldgames6 жыл бұрын
Wow, I just saw this movie for a second time tonight and found your comment about posting this video soon on another one so I subscribed to know when it would come out, didn't expect it to be minutes later! Great video on what is one of the best movies I've ever seen
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
That's lucky timing! Thanks for watching :)
@untitledtransient2 жыл бұрын
Well researched and beautifully tied together.
@conflictmagazine6 жыл бұрын
Excellent job on this video. Finally someone who has researched the background and the Lovecraft connection. AND BIG SPOILER ALERT I don't understand how viewers are having such a hard time understanding the film and especially the end ...it's the most beautiful alien invasion ever filmed and the alien won...the end. The film for me is about the journey of a group of broken people trying to find some kind of answers and meaning in their own lives. They tell the basic story of what the alien is doing by playing out their scenes. The Shimmer is a petri dish where the alien is testing all the possible ways that it can continue its existence. The alien has shown up and is looking for traction and finally finds it in the humans who inhabit the earth. It's not that complicated and it's not lacking in plot or resolution. I would ask people to watch the film Ascension by Karim Hussain and then come back and and view Annihilation again. And the more times you watch it the more you see. Can't wait to get this one in-house.
@An0nim0u55 жыл бұрын
I did not like the way it was executed, paced and especially acted... You can be inexplicable but still be beautiful like Kubrick's 2001 but this was a mess from the start to finish, solely and heavily depending upon serene visual experiences which eventually became too mindless & excessive to enjoy... The story sucks but probably if I am high I might enjoy the end bit a little... Boring, pretentious stuff that could have used scientific consistency but still being elusive... 0:34 if this doesn't wanna make you slap the bitch out of this actress then I don't know what would...
@tylerfrancavilla81115 жыл бұрын
I can see how to an average viewer the ending would be difficult to understand. Don't be so pretentious. Some film goers seek entertainment. That's why we have great people like Thomas to help break it down for those people! FTR I loved this movie.
@An0nim0u55 жыл бұрын
@@tylerfrancavilla8111 Was your response directed towards me...???
@emilycrow82785 жыл бұрын
What if I told you that you didn't even get the movie? It's an allegory for trauma and change, which is why the final confrontation is a reflection of the protagonist, because her change requires self destruction and not ways necessarily of positive or negative aspects, and the outcome of one's character afterwards isn't really known, which is a terrifying concept. The movie isn't about the alien, it's about the group of characters. They literally tell you throughout the movie that this is the case too.
@ArifGhostwriter2 жыл бұрын
@@An0nim0u5 No - it was directed at the Original Poster - Conflict Magazine.
@loganwelty70943 жыл бұрын
Outstanding essay Thomas. Such an amazing movie.
@jonathanacuna6 жыл бұрын
Finally a great analysis of annihilation. This was so satisflying enjoy. Embracing the unknown with a story with no common closure.
@Bayuuk3 жыл бұрын
I will never forget the first time I saw a trailer for Annihilation. I was waiting for the Last Jedi to start, And at that point in my life I was watching more films, with one of my all time favorites being Ex Machina. So of course I rushed to see Annihilation the moment I saw it was in theaters, and was not disappointed. Truly a great film
@palindrome25996 жыл бұрын
I swear your videos keep getting better and better. Great stuff man, great stuff.
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
Glad to hear it! Always trying to hone the craft.
@lucamodeo21422 жыл бұрын
Magnificent movie and a really good work from you. I love what you do, thanks.
@wosnan4 жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis, congratulations, it is a channel with a general and broad content. Greetings from Colombia.
@ArmonMitchell6 жыл бұрын
Finally a review that isnt full of it. I now know how to enjoy the movie.
@michaelschwartz87306 жыл бұрын
Great video! I didn't realize there were so many parallels there were with "Color", especially since previous adaptations were so different. I know you've already had the Stalker convo below, but I'd argue Solaris is equally influential, and that both films' source novels are well worth exploring. To my memory, the end of Lem's Solaris could be used to parse Annihilation pretty well...
@michaelvincent76813 жыл бұрын
Excellent. At times very unique and thought provoking analysis. I enjoyed your video very much.
@Greeeebs6 жыл бұрын
Amazing video, very well thought and put together so damn well. Wish you more views and recognition, man
@Greeeebs6 жыл бұрын
Instantly subscribed
@adieo12346 жыл бұрын
This movie really blew my freaking mind. And I really like your explanation of it.
@Hermelu4 ай бұрын
I highly advise anyone who enjoyed Annihilation to read the book. Whilst the movie is good, the book goes so much deeper. Only a tiny fraction of that which Jeff Vandermeer came up with was able to fit in this movie. I am quite sad that none of the video essays ever talk about it. Also, the two other books of the trilogy are quite different, yet they are an enjoyable read for all those who want to deepen the mystery.
@jamesjoelholmes45416 жыл бұрын
A perfect essay. Falls slightly short of my experience of this film--but you and I are on the same page--I think. Thank you for sharing your insights.
@Basicslag6 ай бұрын
the scenery reminds me of the jungle of decay in Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, the imagery reminds me of 2001: a space odyssey
@user-td2ig4kr7m6 жыл бұрын
This is a beautiful movie, it's a Masterpiece, I love it
@jacobv84475 жыл бұрын
hell yes, friend
@ofkfdjdjfk75746 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, absolutely superb editing. Loved the film immensely
@radioactive_angel6 жыл бұрын
Amazing video!! I haven't watched the movie, but the book was amazing. You explained everything I loved about it, and helped me understand a bit more of it. This just deepens my love for Annihilation. Thanks!!
@kakolicht6 ай бұрын
One of the best lovecraftian inspired weird movies I ever saw.
@Kapitano4146 жыл бұрын
As a fan of both the book and the film, I loved your take here on the incomprehensibility of Annihilition's unknown. Good stuff man. Are you familiar with Michael Crichton's novel Sphere? He delves a bit into the inevitability of human understanding of alien behavior/motivations as well...he presents a good layman's terms analogy involving an alien microbe encountering a satellite orbiting Earth.
@RazerBurntMeatFlaps6 жыл бұрын
bro i thought all the same stuff you talk about in your video. this is brilliant love the video .first thing popped in my head when watching annihilation was.....man the similarities between the colour out of space are uncanny. i love the story and the movie as well very thought provoking.
@flippert06 ай бұрын
No other movie explored "otherwordliness" so thoroughly as Annihilation
@Davethreshold3 жыл бұрын
I am 69. I have always thought that there were things out there that scientists do not know exist. Years ago, it turned out we have one right here! Time magazine talked about a creature that lives on the ocean floor. For years scientists thought that was impossible. The pressure was over 500 pounds per square inch. What was even more mind-boggling? It lives right next to a natural gas vent where it flourished. Its size might have been two to six inches. Back then if a scientist predicted that could happen, he would have been run out of the scientific community. For this reason, I LOVE this film!! Far more than dispensing with cliches, it showed us a whole new possibility and it all started not by a hostile force, but something random from outer space that, "just happened." One similar incredible film that I recommend is The Andromeda Strain. (!!)(Michael Crichton) about a lethal space virus that we could not figure out.
@TGill6 жыл бұрын
Good work. Engrossed the whole time.
@ThomasFlight6 жыл бұрын
Good! I felt like I was juggling a lot of balls with this one, glad it was engaging.
@arthurwild65636 жыл бұрын
Superb editing. You deserve more subs.
@Miata8222 жыл бұрын
Good peek into the drivers of _Annihilation_ . The Lovecraft connection was new to me. I am building up the will to watch the movie again. _Annihilation_ is a "you get it or you don't" movie. The very best science fiction and fantasy never explain exactly what the McGuffin is or how it works. Those stories examine how people think, feel, and act in a world where the McGuffin is real. _Annihilation_ , the novel, goes into far deeper detail while still resisting the temptation of easy answers or a story arc that neatly ties loose ends. While separate works, both novel and movie mirror our lives in this world. As much as we work to deny it, there is so much of our fragile lives that is beyond our knowing. Looking into that mirror brings both wonder and terror. The (excellent) film _Take Shelter_ touches on this theme, and similarly concludes by leaving its meaning in the audience's lap.
@Hyzentley2 жыл бұрын
Absolutly amazing movie. Watched it as it came out and still often think about it as well, also read the books. For me, it works best as a metaphor for mental illness and trauma; the horrifying beauty of the shimmer and the different ways all the women succumb to it captures very well how depression and psychosis feels like.
@nyjets20206 жыл бұрын
this was fucking amazing. everything you said I've felt about the movie but have not been able to articulate. thank you
@jonrice136 жыл бұрын
Great analysis and explanation!
@Christian-ir2mb6 жыл бұрын
great Essay! i admit i didn't relate to Adam and Eve but i think of the ending in that way, i love this movie a lot, i believe the true face of sci fi is questioning and leaving the spectator thinking and that's exactly what annihilation does.
@n0rie9a6 жыл бұрын
ANNIHILATION - instant classic,total game changer and the new yardstick for sci-fi thrillers
@thiagodmxtube6 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks!
@acadia58986 жыл бұрын
Man, i love your work!.
@andrewleon59686 жыл бұрын
Excellent video
@andrewkawam26035 жыл бұрын
I have a very polarized view of 'Annihilation' the film. On one hand, it's a gorgeous, mind-bending, slow-burning, thought-provoking work of art. On the other, it utterly, deeply betrays its source material. Not trying to trash-talk the film, because it is very good, but the more I think about the more true it feels. It strips away the Thoreauvian, ecological themes central to the book (which I find underused in a serious manner in cinema), all of the story except for the scenes where the Biologist's husband arrives home and the team enters Area X, heavily borrows elements from H. P. Lovecraft's 'The Colour Out of Space' while rejecting all of the breathtakingly unique and original imagery and creations of the novels (like the Tower and Crawler, which were not minor details at all but what the whole thing revolved around), totally changes the characters in terms of both appearance and personality (except for the psychologist), removes the profound environmental debates and analyses that added so much depth to the original, ignores the fact that the novels are not three separate stories but one long story, and all in all removes any trace of Jeff VanderMeer's essence. My appreciation for the film grows the more I watch it, but so does the feeling that I would rather have seen someone like Terrence Malick or Darren Aronofsky or Robert Eggers who are skilled with surrealism but can give the natural world the depth and centrality it deserves.
@eva4033 Жыл бұрын
Robert Eggers However Is More With Folk Tales And He Isn't Going To Ever Deal With Some Story's In The Modern Day.
@julianmorrisco6 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video essay.
@karmigero5 жыл бұрын
Solaris has a very similar premise. Amazing book, try reading it if you haven't
@MicTheOni6 жыл бұрын
I knew when I saw the trailer for the first time that it was going to be heavily inspired by H.P. Lovecraft's the color out of space. hell, I believe it might take place in the same universe!
@RSEFX5 жыл бұрын
The last act/acts to this film are powerful and, to me extremely and atmospherically satisfying, tho not surprising. To me the ending and all leading up to it are of a kind, and evoked a very subjective state of mind, like direct connection to the subconsciousness---or the ether--- of existing/of existence. Like the well in COLOUR OUT OF SPACE, there really is no bottom at the bottom, just the flow of inexplicable colors that draw us in and make us want to think about them. That's as close as i can come with words. It is all very DMT, and that doesn't equate very often with boffo boxoffice/entertainment for the masses.
@jorgejungl11 ай бұрын
I love these types of stories. Did anyone else have a hard time with the dialogue? Like it was made for a youth audience? It was no Roadside Picnic/Stalker in that sense. I would have enjoyed it more as a silent film
@midwintersnight4 жыл бұрын
*the color....... the color.......*
@calvinsmale93366 жыл бұрын
Great explanation. Subbed!
@thomasmacfarlane87376 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I used to have horrible night terrors and the last scene in the black room messed me up because it was so similar to what I saw and experienced. This is why I love lovecraft and films like this because the terror I felt in those dreams was so incomprehensible just like the and stories he tells. It gets me closer to understanding what it is I was experiencing.
@PineappleStickers3 ай бұрын
I always hate when people compare movies like Annihilation to Lovecraft, it's such a disservice. Lovecraft was so self involved in his own writing, it was like he thought every concept and idea was the most important things anyone had ever put to page, but also not important enough to give it more of a description that his classic "unknowable" cop out
@cynickicksass6 жыл бұрын
Great video
@The_Cosmic_Jester5 жыл бұрын
The final scene inside the lighthouse, visuals are exactly the same as look a DMT trip...
@realrudy7352 жыл бұрын
This video captures what I love about stories of aliens
@midwintersnight4 жыл бұрын
This movie is just an indirect adaptation of The Colour out of Space. If you liked this, you'll LOVE the 2020 movie Color out of Space with Nicolas Cage!!
@JonesP776 жыл бұрын
Every time someone talks about DMT i get a nice chill on the neck. This stuff breaks every barrier. I think this is the room of death, colours which i didnt know existed, the deep deep feeling being finally home after a long travel, it feels like a hug from god. Dying no longer scares me. I have seen what is possible in this world. If you want to know why we are here or if you have other question to this life, you should read more about DMT and maybe, just maybe give it a try. (if youre older than 25) !! Its the only thing which give me some answers who are clearer than i could ever imagine. Dont do drugs, do psychedelics ;-) Take care of you guys and inform yourself before you do anything!
@Imperial_Cosmonaut5 жыл бұрын
What's unexplainable in the end? Alien mergess with flash grenade/fire and burns itself out. This spreads. All that's left is the contaminated girl and the clone.
@Noxxiee.38623 жыл бұрын
Pretty good movie, it could be about an Alien invasion, Cancer, facing your own fears, accepting your past, Evolution...etc
@elfsieben14503 жыл бұрын
H.P. Lovecraft's "The Colour Out of Space" might come to mind, but Stanisław Lem's "Solaris" and Arkadi & Boris Strugatsky's "Roadside Picnic" are at least just as likely influences.
@ZachMatics6 жыл бұрын
Earned a subscriber
@MrDrManPerson6 жыл бұрын
Earned a sub
@Thb934 жыл бұрын
Pretty wild how you refer to the ending as a Deus Ex Machina of sorts. Without giving any spoilers, that idea plays a large role in his most recent tv series, Devs. Highly suggest
@lindac0772 жыл бұрын
Love,love,this movie Have watched about 20 times. Had to watch a few times to get meaning! ,
@marcusaurelius51492 жыл бұрын
After watching Color Out of Space, I can't help but see Annihilation as it's sequel.
@usdjxavi6 жыл бұрын
Saw this the morning after i went on an acid trip, quite a thing to see in theaters