What
will life be like if we continue our descent into technology dependent hobbies
and lifestyle choices? Her is so
completely about the growing relationship between man and machine that
discussing it becomes almost redundant.
Jonze
has imagined a future that realistically feels only a few years away. The
online relationships that are springing up, mostly in metropolises, are growing
(here Jonze creates a larger, but equally transient version of Los Angeles).
People engage in revealing and emotionally exposing conversations with real
people over a virtual platform. Her
simply posits what would happen if the real on the other end were
(artificially) intelligent, but entirely artificial. It does this so well, whilst
asking so many of the relevant questions about our relationships with
technology it feels like a complete film. In turn this is a film with a very
specific audience; one that has grown up in a landscape world and not the
portrait one of print newspaper and magazines.
Without
the narrative ever drawing attention to them, there is something magical about
the spaces. Jonze clearly has an interest in architecture, as his imagined LA
is a thing of beauty, romanticized through a sweeping camera catching the dawn
and dusk light. This is juxtaposed with the threatening glowing
Terminator-esque red light that indicates Theodore's artificial girlfriend is
calling. Jonze’s message is delicate, but clearly there.
Jonze's
city, while being man made is also warmly populated with people of all
cultures. The transience of LA being just one example of the incredible
attention to detail that makes Her’s
future immediately believable. Although the people of the city walk around
attached to their phones, Jonze highlights the positivity of human contact.
Theodore and his 'girlfriend' imagine the past and future of a family they see
in a shopping mall, without realising their own past and future are in turn
imagined and destined to fail. Later, when Theodore needs them after tripping,
the seemingly isolated population rushes to help him. Outside of the metropolis
Jonze takes Theodore to a snowy forest and sun-drenched beach. With the absence
of people Jonze highlights the beauty of nature, a feature of our world that
existed before us and well before the operating systems (OS) of Her's future.
Yet
Jonze is not making a sweeping statement about the dangers of technology. Much
of the technology in this future is ergonomic. Jonze's comment is far more
specific. Despite the difficulties of real relationships we should endure as
the alternative, regardless of how exciting they may seem are damaging. This
message carries even more impact due to Jonze’s handling of the romance.
Theodore and Samantha, his OS are in a relationship; he openly and without
embarrassment tells people about Samantha, they go on dates (‘she’ sits in his
top pocket, held up by a safety pin so she can ‘see’ through the camera in the
phone), they have sex, they share everything, their break up is heart breaking.
This is a relationship and Jonze sells it as one and if you buy it, the pay off
is impressive.
By
the end, Jonze offers Theodore hope in the form of a real woman. And where do
they share a moment that will, we hope, bring them together? On the roof of their
shared apartment building, overlooking the glimmering, beautiful lights of LA
at night.
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