Being born into a certain generation is like being chained
to a certain train of thought or set of ideals. Today, people can’t be expected
to live without computers or cell phones. In the Middle Ages, it was caste
systems and disease. If I spend too much time thinking about this, I’ll only
get depressed because I realize that freedom is only an illusion that can be
attained within a certain set of rules.
But sometimes I can’t help it. I often find myself wishing
and daydreaming about living in the past. I think that part of this has to do
with the fact that I’ve been watching people slowly drifting apart because of
technology for my entire life. I’ve seen marriages- the ultimate of all
intimate relationships- end because partners no longer live with their spouse;
they live with their phone and their group of friends on Facebook. I’ve seen
entire families sitting in the same room, all on their phones, barely noticing
each other. These people spread their time thin over a hundred or a thousand
people, instead of investing it into the person or small group of people that
they really love. It’s not that they are trying to place distance; it’s just
the world that they are chained to.
This weekend, I watched Her,
starring Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Adams.
The movie was funny at moments and incomplete in others, but its main focus
is the role of technology in interpersonal relationships. Theodore Twombly-
played by Phoenix- is an isolated, recently divorced man that leans on his
operating system for comfort in the face of loneliness. Over time, he evolves
with the “consciousness” (as it’s called in the movie) and falls in love. A
pretty wild concept?
As I watched the film, I could hear other members of the audience
scoffing at Phoenix as their laps lit up from cell phone lights. Other
characters in the film roll their eyes and give him dirty looks as they have an
earpiece in and they talk to themselves. It was surreal and funny and ludicrous
all at the same time. The movie was mocking the audience and their destiny.
Today, people are already in relationships with their
technology. Sure, for some, there are people on the other end of that line or
computer screen. But this is superficial and distant. As people become more
comfortable with technology, it’s going to take up more of their time. As
technology is perfected, it’s going to become the tool that they rely upon for
comfort. After all, why would anybody get too close to another person that is
only going to hurt their feelings or make them confront something that they don’t
like about themselves? Nobody. We’re a species that is all about minimizing
pain. Why wouldn’t we cut that out, too?
In the end, Jonze’ film spends most of its time showing that
getting too close to anything (computer or person) will only leave a person
wounded. Everything is just evolving too fast and in too many directions for
two beings to stay on the same path for an extended period of time. What Jonze
says is a good point, but he seems to be of the group that is overly in love
with technology and thinks that this destiny is inevitable. I, however, think
that that is just a cop out. But who knows? I might just be too in love with
the past.
Movie Grade- B