Date: Fri 17-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 17-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Contact-Playing-Foster-Gump
Full Text:
(rev "Contact" for Now Playing, 10/17/97)
Now Playing--
How to Follow A Mega Hit? Contact!
By Trey Paul Alexander III
If you had directed Forrest Gump , how would you follow it up? Think about it:
Forrest Gump became one of the biggest moneymakers of all time; birthed an
ubiquitous catch phrase ("Life is like a box of chocolates..."); garnered star
Tom Hanks' second straight Academy Award win for Best Actor, as well as
snagging Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director; and merged uncanny effects
work (Gump shakes hand with President Kennedy) with elegant storytelling. What
do you do? If you're director Robert Zemeckis, you bring a 1985 best-selling
novel by Carl Sagan to life and end up with what was the summer's most
intelligent popcorn movie.
Contact , playing this week at the Edmond Town Hall Theater, is yet another
film in Hollywood's flavor-of-the-month genre, the alien movie (i e,
Independence Day , Mars Attacks , Men In Black , the upcoming Alien sequel,
etc). Yet this ambitious flick seeks not just a rousing display of thrilling
visual effects and distracting eye-candy, but strives to provide an exercise
for both the eyes and the mind as it grapples with the question of whether
mankind is alone in the universe and what kind of implications the search for
intelligent life elsewhere have upon personal and religious beliefs.
The superb Jodie Foster, who last appeared on screen in 1994's Nell , portrays
dogged scientist Dr Ellie Arroway. The electricity of her performance, not the
flashy effects, is what propels this film. Arroway is a relentlessly
determined individual obsessed with finding proof that there are voices to be
heard out in the stars. Working under the SETI program (Search for
ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence), Arroway uses its array of radio telescopes to
search the heavens for alien messages. Eventually, she hits what she believes
to be the jackpot, a signal from the star Vega, and the debate -- which
involves her boss (Tom Skerritt), the government, and an ex-lover (Matthew
McConaughey) -- is on as to how best to proceed after the reception of this
potentially earth-shattering news.
Debate fuels the first half of the film as Arroway faces off against foe after
foe in the scientific community who tell her that her search is in vain and an
indefensible waste of government funds. But perhaps the most compelling
dialectic posed comes courtesy of the spiritual guru played by McConaughey,
who also serves as the romantic interest. He counters the convictions of
Arroway, an atheist who can find no discernible proof for the existence of
God, with the question, How can a scientist, particularly one searching for
evidence of life out in the great beyond, not believe in the existence of God?
This philosophical tug-of-war provides rich subtext for a film that gains
momentum in its second half as the implications of Arroway's discovery leads
to the crafting of an elaborate vehicle whose purpose is to transport a single
human occupant/ambassador to the distant star. Here, Zemeckis' exceptional
craftsmanship shines, as the gusto of the movie's visual effects matches the
aforementioned intensity of Foster's performance. But Zemeckis also knows that
bells and whistles alone do not a superior climax make, so he also loads the
finale with plot twists, mysteries and ambiguities that would fit in with the
narrative maneuverings of "The X-Files."
Contact , rated PG for mild profanity and suggestive sexual content, may not
have taken the world by storm as Zemeckis' Forrest Gump did, but driven by the
sheer force of Foster's performance and the steady, guiding hand of Zemeckis,
it proves to be an immensely satisfying, if just short of epically stirring,
motion picture. Alas, if only more summer flicks strove for the depth and
complexity to which this movie aspires.
