The Story of Your Life was the first reading assignment for a class I took for creative writing credits in college. Back then I was absolutely certain it's not possible to be adapted into a visual media. 3 years later, Denis Villeneuve and Eric Heisserer entered the server and proved how wrong I was. How the film reconstructs the source material's narrative while being shockingly faithful in tone is quite astounding. I was marveling how they pulled off this adaptation when I watched it for the first time instead of feeling sad that I knew how the story would go.
This reminds me of how I felt when I watched the movie the second time about 4 months after the first time. Catching all of the little details that give the twist away throughout the movies was quite amazing. I would say I enjoyed watching it the second time even more than I did the first which is quite rare for me.
@@EckhartsLadder I personally not a fan of "we need make contact" scenarios, as in reality when aliens would arrive it would be only to tell us that they were already here. Advanced technology would allow easily for passive scan alongside infiltration with use of shapeshifting robots. And no one would make first contact not knowing how someone could react. You most likely would try take control even before official thing happen so primitives wouldn't nuke themselves. And yes, the irony is that aliens would most likely look exactly as humans to make contact easier, even if in reality they would be a machine hive mind (because it is also where evolution of humanity is going... look internet). Still putting aside dubois science behind gift, at least in the movie it make sense why they chose way they did. It is why it is a good movie in the end.
@@punkypink83 OMG I can relate! Sometimes it's just more interesting to see how the story evolves to a plot point than simply knowing said plot point will happen. I got into GOT way after it ended and basically knew every major twist and turn through sheer cultural osmosis. I was thrilled by the idea of Danny becoming the mad queen at the end until I saw how terribly rushed the development ended up being.
The book this short story is from, "A Story of Your Life and Others", is a simply excellent read. The book contains five such stories, each dealing with a different and interesting look at the world through different scientific viewpoints. The book also contains an afterward for each of the stories by the author explaining the though process and framework of each one. The best way to read it, in my opinion, is to read each story and afterward as a pair. This book is a simply excellent read, and I highly recommend it to anyone who found this video intriguing!
This story is a kind of happy Lovecraftian story. In many of HP's stories, human minds that study alien languages or mathematics begin to gain access to strange powers and visions. Of course, in Lovecraft, these powers unravel and destroy the protagonist, whereas in this one the change of perspective helps and completes her. It even has cephalopod-style aliens! The trappings are all there.
How can I become paracausal? That is and has always been my goal as long as I can remember. Yet I remember a reality where I was beat to death and stoned. And another where I was living in a house among the forest at peace. I was once an architect, a pilot, a musician... Yet here I am stuck in this reality trying to re
@@erika002 because I work 7 days a week for no pay just to have a room to sleep in and not live under a bridge. My back is fucked up and my brain is muddy chemical soup. Between psyche hospitals and 12 hour crying sessions i don't have the energy to write nor will anyone read or pay for it. No, my only options going back in time
The one thing I take away from Science Fiction was a whole is that it can really make you think. It can really make you change your view on the world around you, your way of thinking, your beliefs, etc. Do more of these.
Unfortunately it too often does this through half-truths or misunderstandings/misinterpretations of various scientific principles. Even Fermat's principle here is grossly misunderstood, and was incomplete in its original format (back in the 17th century). Light doesn't travel as a "ray" but as a wave, allowing it to "test" alternate paths as it passes through and allowing for variation in the time it takes to reach a given object. But okay, let's just go along with it, how do you get from that to knowing the future? To do that, in a purely Newtonian universe, you would have to know the location and velocity of every particle in the universe. Even if you only had to know the ones that would ever reach you, you'd have to know so much that a supercomputer the size of Jupiter wouldn't suffice, never mind a puny mortal brain. And that's a purely Newtonian universe, when in reality quantum physics exists and gives a giant middle finger to Newtonian physics with the Uncertainty Principle and the ability of certain basic building blocks to simply pop in and out of existence (also exaggerated, but gets to the point). Long story short, never forget what the *_fi_* part of sci-fi stands for. Just because something sounds "sciencey" doesn't mean it's actual science.
@@khadenallast4495 True. There is several super pretentious movies what make no sense. Interstelar for example make sense only if you presume that guy suffer hibernation trauma and nothing actually happen, with only epilog being true. This one is ok, though mostly in poetic sense. After all resolution make no sense. Only actually good recent SF movies are The Expanse and The Martian (though here Mars wind aren't that strong, still rest of the movie is fine).
@@TheRezro I don't mind artistic liberties, and I don't mind a disregard of science in favor of more fantasy elements. It's when they try to manipulate science to try to explain them or make themselves seem deep or thought provoking, when it's just smoke and mirrors or feeble attempts to try to legitimize a given element. For example I don't mind the turbolasers or lightsabers or whatever in Star Wars, I do mind the EU's attempts to claim that they're plasma.
@@khadenallast4495 Advanced aliens would also be a giant middle finger. It would be the equivalent of explaining a computer to an ancient Aztec. They don't have the words or concepts to understand it and if they even get half of what you're saying their languages and cultural frame might make it into something entirely different and get something else our from it. Remember: the universe is a mad place. Who knows what you get out from it when you let it take you for a ride
One of my favorite quotes goes, "Science fiction is nothing less than possibility in a universe so grand of scale" Fiction is just possibility. I love it
Damn... I don’t know if you remember me. You helped me with my resume over 3 years ago. I’ve been watching and supporting ever since from a distance. This was very well done! I’ve always loved Arrival for these exact same reasons. Keep on keepin on bro and mtfbwy always.
Saw the movie and all I could think was that they should have sent a 6 year old to play ball with the aliens. That 6 year old would have learned the language in a couple of weeks.
@S P E E D O but they pick up languages fast. Go work for the school system for a day and you will have 4 year olds translating for thier parents. The six year olds are fluent in just a few weeks, their parents never learn the language though.
Possibly not, though, cause linear kids that age don't yet have in their memories a frame of reference when they know so many of the concepts to learn to think acausally about yet. Depends how the story's hero actually got that shift in consciiousness, did the languistic skills and ideas have to be there for her to learn to be outside time or could the aliens just take a kid outside time to where they'd presumably know the philisophy and math, etc.
I haven't read the book, but I have seen the film and I love it. It makes you think, it provokes thoughts that otherwise wouldn't be sparked. If you try to think about this from a mathematical or scientific point, you won't get it, what you'll get is a headache. We've been conditioned to think of cause leading to effect (causality as physicists call it), not cause and effect being intertwined or even the same thing. This film is a great 'what if' point, what if you could think in a non-linear way? I really need to watch it again. Great video Eck, a very nice surprise change from the usual content.
I laughed at this because Starship Troopers and Arrival are almost completely opposite movies lol. "We need to understand the aliens unique perspective of space and time" to "THE ONLY GOOD BUG IS A DEAD BUG"
I remember reading it AFTER seeing Arrival (which is imho one of the best sci fi movies ever made), and I was just astonished how Villeneuve managed to translate this story into a production -AT ALL- Dune is in good hands! Speaking of, post-Tyrant BG would be SO terrified of Heptapods! Creatures essentially living in that trap they fear so much, being trapped in-the-eye-of-an-oracle. Of course, Heptapods aren't prescient, but still, BG would be oh-so-freaked-out! :D
This video was really deep and somewhat dark how she could see her child die and do nothing to stop it. But I also found comfort in it as well with how she knew it would happen but found her life enjoyable anyway
Ive stopped watching your star wars videos for a while but when i saw this video i instantly clicked. Great to see you branching out, loved your SCP vids too!
I wonder if we do think in a paracausal way without realising it. When people talk about "using their intuition", there doesn't seem to be an explanation for this in the causal way our science sees events. Yet from experience I can say that my intuition always works as when I'm using it it's almost like I'm seeing the decision and destination as if they've already happened, as if there could be no other way. Similar to how the light seems to 'know' it's course from the very beginning.
@@Stratonetic I'm pretty sure Eckhartsladder knows but he chooses to deliberately ignore me. It's funny he saids he promises to do it but yet he doesn't do it. So much for promises.
You can only grieve for what you loved truly, to love is also intrinsically linked with loss and knowing you will one day lose what you love, the ending is the same no matter what. Knowing this and reminding yourself of the future will make you also appreciate the moment you call the present
This was a refreshing movie to say the least. I love my action, horror, and suspense movies just like everyone else. But I always tend to appreciate movies that either keeps me thinking or envelopes me in wonder and discover. This movie does both so I completely satisfied with the experience overall. It can't hurt that I'm also a big fan of Sci-fi movies/shows.
Hey Eckhart, Loving the vids I think you should do a video on the side factions such as the Ewoks, wookies, the naboo and the Geonosians. From star wars!!!
So if a bunch of Jawas and Ewoks were to get together and crew and control a world devastator (toning down the AI to serve their style if need be), what would happen?
Loved this breakdown! Seen quite a few of breakdowns of Arrival, your is by far the best one, by really getting to the unique thinking at the core of this story! Well done
A thought I just had listening to you talk about it: To Louise, the act of changing the future -- especially in the film, where her daughter dies not of an accident but of a genetic defect she was born with -- would have been the death of her daughter, just as surely as the death she finally died. She would be erasing the daughter she knows and loves before she is even born from ever having existed.
I've struggled for years with an understanding of human interaction that I'm not sure should exist or really anyone else has experienced. I've watched human interaction from an observational behaviorist point of view for most of my childhood, without friends, silently watching everyone, in highschool I was introduced to psychology the nature vs nurture, the patterns and behaviors, cognitive roots and sociological tendencies that I've already known but had no names for. Two decades now after I first started observing, and I'm three years past a bachelor's degree in psychology, I've found the tendencies to be interesting, I preface my next statement with this history to hopefully explain my understanding. I often have conversations that I already know the outcome and what they are going to say, I often change how I speak knowing how everyone that hears it will end up reacting, sometimes word for word. I have triggered reactions that I've seen thousands of times in hundreds of people, and the separate flavors of humanity I come across have dulled into a gelatatous grey. I rarely find people I do not fundamentally understand after two sentences with them. I sometimes enjoy days with friends, watching new movies, new video games etc, knowing how it's going to end but still enjoy the complexity of human interaction and the time spent in it. But even that has started to grey. I'm 25, turning 26 this year. This story, speaks to me as an individual and how I grew up, the organic silence of the human experience stretched out by time, such a silly thing, and I hope it doesn't become stale anytime soon. I'm at peace with knowing these ends, and it has become a comforting thought that even after it all, it will be worth every moment. Not that I have any precognition and such, but I understand that every moment of your life will progress on and on and then the end. A beginning and end. And because of that, with my very human understanding of the universe, I can understand the next year, day, hour, and be able to tell another person exactly what they need to hear to hopefully grow beyond themselves. I consider this story to be hopeful and wonderous, and I'm so glad you covered it. I hope it can provoke a greater understanding of the life of the people who've read the story and watched this video. And for anyone that read all the way through, thank you for your time. :) I hope you have a wonderful day.
im the same way, i describe it as not having the gang member gene. just happy observing and not joining alota groups for herd bias reasons or whatever. what would you do/conclude if you dont believe in psychics and hippie mumbo jumbo but had a vision(in my case a dream) that came true about a massive world event and even had a voice (your own voice) saying "do not forget this this is important" it happened to me. much as i dont believe in that type of thing but i do believe strange quantum mechanics are possible so idk.
i know theres alota humans and alota dreams each night must be alota coincidences but this was strrrrrange. wasnt like any dream i ever had exactly, had the intensity of a really bad nightmare but not a nightmare feeling, and i was very conscious during the dream and after i awoke. even remembered it after a few days unlike most dreams that disappear fast. and couple other things add some weirdness to it.
"Why do you ask 'what?" "When the delicious question is 'when?" "The only difference between past and present..." "...is semantics." "Lives. Live. Will Live." "Dies. Died. Will Die." "If we could perceive time as it truly was..." "...what reason would grammar professors have to get out of bed in the morning. " -name that quote
Loved the story. As a strong believer is "Block Spacetime" it resonates with me - I think you must live as if you have agency even if the reality is you do not have it. Any action that you takes that does not make tomorrow better did not make tomorrow better.
Just found out the there is going to be a discussion about Arrival at Ohio State featuring several professors fro the linguistics and astronomy departments next week. I will be sure to attend (on Zoom of course), should be a good discussion.
ive seen one or two but dont think anyone really mentioned why some alien intelligence or even nature would do something like that, they just always explain the movie. wouldnt it be for rapid evolution? what else could it be for? intelligent flowers?
Your video made me want to both read the book and see the movie- thank you, because I know I will. I frequently reread books that obviously I already know the ending of, and the ending of it’s sequels, etc- but I always explain it to people who ask why, that it’s because I enjoy the feeling that it gives me every time. It’s like visiting a place that I’ve been before, and love being there. It doesn’t matter that I know the ending, because it doesn’t have to have one- I can always start it over, and I eventually always do. Before the movies came out, that’s how the Lord of the Rings was to me. I’ve always been a very advanced reader, and read The Hobbit in second grade (1982- seems so long ago) and LOTR finally in fourth grade- and I revisited that world in full once every year since, but also dipping in just to read parts of it multiple times throughout the year- it was a place that I felt comfortable in, and it has always brought me a lot of joy. I know it isn’t exactly the same as the idea of this movie (and book), but it makes me think of that feeling. Anyway- thanks again for sharing this video- I’m looking forward to seeing and reading this. I hope that you and your family are safe and healthy- take care!
I've not read the book, but I have watched the movie. I was still in my mid teens when the movie came out, and had only read the intro to the book before brushing it aside. Watching the movie then made no sense to me, it seemed to confusing. However, looking back at the movie, and seeing the genius behind how it was filmed and how it relates to human life in so many different way opens ur eyes to view things in a different way. Honestly, this movie deserves way more credit then it has received, and in a way, is a hidden gem.
Love all your videos! I think a return to factions compared would be cool, but with new factions outside of StarWars, like StarCraft or Sins of a Solar Empire.
Given this is a major a StarWars channel, let's assume that there is some intersection between SW fans and people who appreciated Arrival. Then why would be inconcievable to some people that SW fans were nor satisfied with the shortcomings on the Disney trilogy once theu had Arrival as partial benchmark,
I just bought this video a few days ago and watched it. It was not what i expected and and it turned out much bettet than I was ever hoping it could have been.
I bought this book in England and read it as we sailed the Irish Sea. This one and the rest of the stories in the book are small masterpieces. Love the video, Eck! It was cool getting to revisit and ponder this sci-fi gem.
Two points you raise at the very end. I don't think the aliens telling Louise that the child is her future daugther lessens the message. At that point, imo it is really a message to the dumb dumbs, because you can kinda start figuring the whole thing out already. Maybe the spelling it out method of delivery is too on the nose, almost patronizing, but as far as the message goes, if you hadn't realised by then, you will be surprised anyway. As for them needing humanity in the future, I think it is sufficiently vague, I don't think it ruins the point. We don't even know how humanity helps them. For all we know, learning human language and thus the ability to perceive time from a human pov is already how humanity helps them in the future. If anything, the books version strongly hint shade at it while the movie leaves it actually more open. In the text version, after learning "human" and having a human learn to speak "alien", they just piss off without an explanation. Sounds strongly that they got what they wanted, they delivered the "payment", deal is done, the end. The alternative is one of those endings I just find really annoying "so I don't feel like writing anything else really, so just make up your own stuff! That is why you're buying a book, so you can imagine things in your head all by yourself just like you were before you even got the book, ain't I clever" (have I said I hate those endings). With the movie's version, there is room for imagination, but there is an imagination prompt, and that I very much prefer.
What I found most fascinating was that the movie seemed to also be an homage to Slaughterhouse-Five. The aliens, as conceived in the movie, are aptly described by Vonnegut, "an eyestalk atop a body shaped like a hand". Not only that, but the Tralfamadorians of Vonnegut's writing were similarly unbound from linear causality, describing human perception of time as 'a man strapped to a train and forced to look through a keyhole, only seeing the smallest and most immediate unit of time, instead of being able to view the entire landscape'.
Haven't read the book but wonderful movie. I didn't know what to expect going in fresh and was not disappointed. Great video on the subject of causality vs. predetermination!
Loved this movie. Never read the book. But I was blown away by the film. Reminded me strongly of the Aang-ti monks from starwars and their views on the Force. Wonder if there is some inspiration here
The movie was good, but I like the short story better. I understand why the movie had to create a conflict that wasn't present in the short story, but I think the short story is better because having no conflict in the story allows the reader to just feel the melancholy of it all.
Both the short story and the movie are some of the best of recent science fiction. I didn't like the changes made in the movie though - particularly removing the looking glass devices seemed to change the dynamics of the plot quite a bit - arguably the communication scenes from the story would probably look hilarious on the screen, which wouldn't be good for the overall tone.
Hello Eck, have you ever read a pair of short stories by Harry Turtledove called "Counting Up" and "Counting Down". The stories are bookends in a collection of the same name and address an interesting take on time travel with alternate points of view from the same character past and future. Plus another recommendation from the same author "The Road Not Taken" is a short story that is an interesting flip on the first contact/alien invasion story.
I think about how awesome too a story like this would have been set in the Star Trek or Star Wars universes. An alien craft shows up at each of the major planets in the galaxy and Picard and crew try decipher their language, changing them all irrevocably along the way.
I haven't read the book, but i watched the movie just to properly watch this video, and it brought me to tears as i tried to understand the feeling of having a non-linear sense of time and of your own life, it gave me the same feeling as the short story named "The Egg" (that you can find an animated version of in Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell channel), just, the feeling of you or me, being part of a whole, like something similar to the end of Evangelion, feeling the time and the experience of an entire life, or rather of the entire humanity inside your soul is... I don't know, astonishing, to big to explain on human words hahahahaha great video
I personally am a subscriber to the thought that what we do is a result of simple physical reactions, that me typing this comment was inevitable from the beginning of everything. If you were able to know the velocity and position of every particle in the universe(which is against the known laws of physics), then you too would know of this inevitability, and would be able to write a book describing every past, present and future event. Most people who see this deterministic thinking as sad, something that would make a person cynical, immobile, depressed, but I feel non of those things personally because of two reasons. The first being that I feel like I have a choice in the matter even if my actions are just me completing a prophecy, in other words, I don’t know the future, so as far as I know, I’m writing my own destiny, even if the standard model of physics tells me it’s already been written. The second reason is simply that I often forget about everything I just said until someone brings it up. Yup... That simple. So I kinda understand the thinking of the headapodes, though the whole baby not born yet thing is still confusing me.
@@khadenallast4495 while it is true that quantum physics has a bearing on determinism, it doesn't on the matter of freedom of will. Quantum physics does bring in the factor of chance on the lowest level with the two possible states, but chance can hardly be the cause for deliberation. Hence, a freedom of will based on chance would be only a perceived freedom again.
The Story of your life is a brilliant short story in the book...but the one "Hell is the absence of God" was also great. In all a brilliant collection of short Sci FI stories. Well recommend it 👍
Hey Eck...I came across this channel yesterday. Its a guy by the name of Felipe Gomez. He makes from scratch models of Star Wars ships and vehicles. His creations look awesome. Maybe check him out and give him some promotion on your channel. He is the MCHenry of the physical model (versus virtual model) world but he has only like 790 subscribers but his work is phenomenol. He deserves some exposure to the wider Star Wars community. 👍 The link to his creation of the Super Star Destroyer is below. ruclips.net/video/xXKPqqJVolE/видео.html
Does the path choose the walker, or the walker choose the path? Both and neither. If all paths already exist, does the walking change anything, nothing, or everything? Yes.
I get that the story brings up important questions of free will versus fate and the value of living a life that we know will be brief and full of pain, but the fact that learning a language with circular symbols lets you see the future is just so goofy that I had a hard time taking the story seriously.
What happened to that link in the description for the book? I know I could just search for it on amazon, but if you have an affiliate link, I would rather support you in that way.
Very great video, you did the concept and source material justice. Take it with a grain of salt, because I’ve only seen the movie. I think in sci fi, it is much cooler to have aliens that aren’t anthropomorphic. Sometimes it seems like just a recreation of the fantasy genre in sci fi to have mass effect style aliens make up most of the known races. It seems much more likely that aliens, intelligent extraterrestrials, would be completely different in their perceptions and the motivations arising from their biology.
The Story of Your Life was the first reading assignment for a class I took for creative writing credits in college. Back then I was absolutely certain it's not possible to be adapted into a visual media. 3 years later, Denis Villeneuve and Eric Heisserer entered the server and proved how wrong I was. How the film reconstructs the source material's narrative while being shockingly faithful in tone is quite astounding. I was marveling how they pulled off this adaptation when I watched it for the first time instead of feeling sad that I knew how the story would go.
Yes, I loved it, one or two issues notwithstanding
This reminds me of how I felt when I watched the movie the second time about 4 months after the first time. Catching all of the little details that give the twist away throughout the movies was quite amazing. I would say I enjoyed watching it the second time even more than I did the first which is quite rare for me.
these comments explain why i enjoy spoilers for movies, stories, books, before i sit down to read or watch the actual story
@@EckhartsLadder I personally not a fan of "we need make contact" scenarios, as in reality when aliens would arrive it would be only to tell us that they were already here. Advanced technology would allow easily for passive scan alongside infiltration with use of shapeshifting robots. And no one would make first contact not knowing how someone could react. You most likely would try take control even before official thing happen so primitives wouldn't nuke themselves. And yes, the irony is that aliens would most likely look exactly as humans to make contact easier, even if in reality they would be a machine hive mind (because it is also where evolution of humanity is going... look internet). Still putting aside dubois science behind gift, at least in the movie it make sense why they chose way they did. It is why it is a good movie in the end.
@@punkypink83 OMG I can relate! Sometimes it's just more interesting to see how the story evolves to a plot point than simply knowing said plot point will happen. I got into GOT way after it ended and basically knew every major twist and turn through sheer cultural osmosis. I was thrilled by the idea of Danny becoming the mad queen at the end until I saw how terribly rushed the development ended up being.
This video.... “was so artistically done.”
Don’t you mean...
This video “was” so artistically done 🤣
@@michaelandreipalon359 Thrawn ain't dead
Absolutely
...yes..aYes!!YES!!!
@@ryavix That issue is currently unknown, though I have a vague, maybe alternate or legendary, memory of his tragic end.
The book this short story is from, "A Story of Your Life and Others", is a simply excellent read. The book contains five such stories, each dealing with a different and interesting look at the world through different scientific viewpoints. The book also contains an afterward for each of the stories by the author explaining the though process and framework of each one.
The best way to read it, in my opinion, is to read each story and afterward as a pair. This book is a simply excellent read, and I highly recommend it to anyone who found this video intriguing!
This story is a kind of happy Lovecraftian story. In many of HP's stories, human minds that study alien languages or mathematics begin to gain access to strange powers and visions. Of course, in Lovecraft, these powers unravel and destroy the protagonist, whereas in this one the change of perspective helps and completes her.
It even has cephalopod-style aliens! The trappings are all there.
Oh, I never noticed that
In a nutshell, the extraterrestrial beings are paracausal in nature, meanwhile the humans are bound to causality.
So the Heptapods legit are Guardians then 🤣 lol
How can I become paracausal? That is and has always been my goal as long as I can remember.
Yet I remember a reality where I was beat to death and stoned. And another where I was living in a house among the forest at peace. I was once an architect, a pilot, a musician...
Yet here I am stuck in this reality trying to re
@@jasonhagar1758 You can't. It is a fiction.
@@jasonhagar1758 why not try to write all of that in a book or draw a comic about it?
@@erika002 because I work 7 days a week for no pay just to have a room to sleep in and not live under a bridge. My back is fucked up and my brain is muddy chemical soup. Between psyche hospitals and 12 hour crying sessions i don't have the energy to write nor will anyone read or pay for it.
No, my only options going back in time
The one thing I take away from Science Fiction was a whole is that it can really make you think. It can really make you change your view on the world around you, your way of thinking, your beliefs, etc. Do more of these.
Unfortunately it too often does this through half-truths or misunderstandings/misinterpretations of various scientific principles. Even Fermat's principle here is grossly misunderstood, and was incomplete in its original format (back in the 17th century). Light doesn't travel as a "ray" but as a wave, allowing it to "test" alternate paths as it passes through and allowing for variation in the time it takes to reach a given object. But okay, let's just go along with it, how do you get from that to knowing the future? To do that, in a purely Newtonian universe, you would have to know the location and velocity of every particle in the universe. Even if you only had to know the ones that would ever reach you, you'd have to know so much that a supercomputer the size of Jupiter wouldn't suffice, never mind a puny mortal brain. And that's a purely Newtonian universe, when in reality quantum physics exists and gives a giant middle finger to Newtonian physics with the Uncertainty Principle and the ability of certain basic building blocks to simply pop in and out of existence (also exaggerated, but gets to the point).
Long story short, never forget what the *_fi_* part of sci-fi stands for. Just because something sounds "sciencey" doesn't mean it's actual science.
@@khadenallast4495 True. There is several super pretentious movies what make no sense. Interstelar for example make sense only if you presume that guy suffer hibernation trauma and nothing actually happen, with only epilog being true. This one is ok, though mostly in poetic sense. After all resolution make no sense. Only actually good recent SF movies are The Expanse and The Martian (though here Mars wind aren't that strong, still rest of the movie is fine).
@@TheRezro I don't mind artistic liberties, and I don't mind a disregard of science in favor of more fantasy elements. It's when they try to manipulate science to try to explain them or make themselves seem deep or thought provoking, when it's just smoke and mirrors or feeble attempts to try to legitimize a given element. For example I don't mind the turbolasers or lightsabers or whatever in Star Wars, I do mind the EU's attempts to claim that they're plasma.
@@khadenallast4495 Advanced aliens would also be a giant middle finger. It would be the equivalent of explaining a computer to an ancient Aztec. They don't have the words or concepts to understand it and if they even get half of what you're saying their languages and cultural frame might make it into something entirely different and get something else our from it.
Remember: the universe is a mad place. Who knows what you get out from it when you let it take you for a ride
One of my favorite quotes goes, "Science fiction is nothing less than possibility in a universe so grand of scale"
Fiction is just possibility. I love it
I watched this in a science class in my last year of highschool, it was amazing and I couldn't get the amazing soundtrack out of my head for weeks.
Just watched it last night for the first time, and I knew it was gonna be good when the opening track was On the Nature of Daylight ❤
@@The_Breaded92 I doubt he will reply after a year ngl. Jesus hates you. Grass is green
Damn... I don’t know if you remember me. You helped me with my resume over 3 years ago. I’ve been watching and supporting ever since from a distance. This was very well done! I’ve always loved Arrival for these exact same reasons. Keep on keepin on bro and mtfbwy always.
of course I remember you, just like last time you popped in ;)
EckhartsLadder lol sorry... I wish I was more open, but I just haven’t had the time with my job and life.
EckhartsLadder lol this is the first time in a long time!
I’m so bad... anywho... tellstarwars theory that there is hope ifhe and Filoni does it
EckhartsLadder when was last time I popped in? Was I drunk 😔
The fact that Eck explains the book's plot and yet i still want to read it proves that you can find meaning in the journey
_alien_ _heptapod_
Saw the movie and all I could think was that they should have sent a 6 year old to play ball with the aliens. That 6 year old would have learned the language in a couple of weeks.
that would require the adults viewing children as being useful
@S P E E D O but they pick up languages fast. Go work for the school system for a day and you will have 4 year olds translating for thier parents. The six year olds are fluent in just a few weeks, their parents never learn the language though.
Possibly not, though, cause linear kids that age don't yet have in their memories a frame of reference when they know so many of the concepts to learn to think acausally about yet. Depends how the story's hero actually got that shift in consciiousness, did the languistic skills and ideas have to be there for her to learn to be outside time or could the aliens just take a kid outside time to where they'd presumably know the philisophy and math, etc.
@@OllamhDrab Then send in a small baby to learn how they function? It's either that of sending a man to re-learn a beimgs lifecycle.
I haven't read the book, but I have seen the film and I love it. It makes you think, it provokes thoughts that otherwise wouldn't be sparked. If you try to think about this from a mathematical or scientific point, you won't get it, what you'll get is a headache. We've been conditioned to think of cause leading to effect (causality as physicists call it), not cause and effect being intertwined or even the same thing. This film is a great 'what if' point, what if you could think in a non-linear way?
I really need to watch it again.
Great video Eck, a very nice surprise change from the usual content.
Loved this video so much! I think these sort of “deep dives” into a complex topic like this is incredibly fun and I would love to see more!
#AskEck (Suggestion) Battle Breakdown: The Battle of Klendathu
I laughed at this because Starship Troopers and Arrival are almost completely opposite movies lol. "We need to understand the aliens unique perspective of space and time" to "THE ONLY GOOD BUG IS A DEAD BUG"
@@kirk7528 Indeed
I don't know why but the word Klendathu , when spoken, sets my nerves on edge the combination of sounds is very off-putting to me
Denis Villeneuve is such a master of filmography. I love all his works
Can't wait for Dune. Been just enthralled by that world
Eck: posts a new thing
Me: a surprise but a welcome one to be sure
A surprise to be sure, but a welcome one
I wish you would make more si-fi shortstory videos I really love them and listen to them over and over like podcasts
I remember reading it AFTER seeing Arrival (which is imho one of the best sci fi movies ever made), and I was just astonished how Villeneuve managed to translate this story into a production -AT ALL- Dune is in good hands!
Speaking of, post-Tyrant BG would be SO terrified of Heptapods! Creatures essentially living in that trap they fear so much, being trapped in-the-eye-of-an-oracle. Of course, Heptapods aren't prescient, but still, BG would be oh-so-freaked-out! :D
This video was really deep and somewhat dark how she could see her child die and do nothing to stop it. But I also found comfort in it as well with how she knew it would happen but found her life enjoyable anyway
Ive stopped watching your star wars videos for a while but when i saw this video i instantly clicked. Great to see you branching out, loved your SCP vids too!
I wonder if we do think in a paracausal way without realising it. When people talk about "using their intuition", there doesn't seem to be an explanation for this in the causal way our science sees events. Yet from experience I can say that my intuition always works as when I'm using it it's almost like I'm seeing the decision and destination as if they've already happened, as if there could be no other way. Similar to how the light seems to 'know' it's course from the very beginning.
Intresting. Maybe it's evolution that makes us know that what we choose is correct? Damnit, I love this wobby peice of meat in my head.
#AskEck
*Attempt 809*
Can you do the Forerunners vs the Imperium of Man faction versus video soon please?
Thor's Hammer Forerunners vs Eldar pre fall or the old ones would be a better fight.
He is a man of focus, dedication, and sheer fucking will!
I've seen you post these for months now, sorry you haven't been noticed yet.
@@minoreror9961
We don't know much about the Eldar during their prime though.
@@Stratonetic
I'm pretty sure Eckhartsladder knows but he chooses to deliberately ignore me. It's funny he saids he promises to do it but yet he doesn't do it. So much for promises.
You can only grieve for what you loved truly, to love is also intrinsically linked with loss and knowing you will one day lose what you love, the ending is the same no matter what. Knowing this and reminding yourself of the future will make you also appreciate the moment you call the present
This was a refreshing movie to say the least. I love my action, horror, and suspense movies just like everyone else. But I always tend to appreciate movies that either keeps me thinking or envelopes me in wonder and discover. This movie does both so I completely satisfied with the experience overall. It can't hurt that I'm also a big fan of Sci-fi movies/shows.
Hey Eckhart, Loving the vids I think you should do a video on the side factions such as the Ewoks, wookies, the naboo and the Geonosians. From star wars!!!
... They are species, not factions
So if a bunch of Jawas and Ewoks were to get together and crew and control a world devastator (toning down the AI to serve their style if need be), what would happen?
For what it's worth, I didn't realize the daughter was in her future, until she explained it all at the end of the film.
Loved this breakdown! Seen quite a few of breakdowns of Arrival, your is by far the best one, by really getting to the unique thinking at the core of this story! Well done
A thought I just had listening to you talk about it:
To Louise, the act of changing the future -- especially in the film, where her daughter dies not of an accident but of a genetic defect she was born with -- would have been the death of her daughter, just as surely as the death she finally died. She would be erasing the daughter she knows and loves before she is even born from ever having existed.
I've struggled for years with an understanding of human interaction that I'm not sure should exist or really anyone else has experienced. I've watched human interaction from an observational behaviorist point of view for most of my childhood, without friends, silently watching everyone, in highschool I was introduced to psychology the nature vs nurture, the patterns and behaviors, cognitive roots and sociological tendencies that I've already known but had no names for. Two decades now after I first started observing, and I'm three years past a bachelor's degree in psychology, I've found the tendencies to be interesting, I preface my next statement with this history to hopefully explain my understanding.
I often have conversations that I already know the outcome and what they are going to say, I often change how I speak knowing how everyone that hears it will end up reacting, sometimes word for word. I have triggered reactions that I've seen thousands of times in hundreds of people, and the separate flavors of humanity I come across have dulled into a gelatatous grey. I rarely find people I do not fundamentally understand after two sentences with them. I sometimes enjoy days with friends, watching new movies, new video games etc, knowing how it's going to end but still enjoy the complexity of human interaction and the time spent in it. But even that has started to grey. I'm 25, turning 26 this year. This story, speaks to me as an individual and how I grew up, the organic silence of the human experience stretched out by time, such a silly thing, and I hope it doesn't become stale anytime soon.
I'm at peace with knowing these ends, and it has become a comforting thought that even after it all, it will be worth every moment. Not that I have any precognition and such, but I understand that every moment of your life will progress on and on and then the end. A beginning and end. And because of that, with my very human understanding of the universe, I can understand the next year, day, hour, and be able to tell another person exactly what they need to hear to hopefully grow beyond themselves.
I consider this story to be hopeful and wonderous, and I'm so glad you covered it. I hope it can provoke a greater understanding of the life of the people who've read the story and watched this video.
And for anyone that read all the way through, thank you for your time. :) I hope you have a wonderful day.
im the same way, i describe it as not having the gang member gene. just happy observing and not joining alota groups for herd bias reasons or whatever.
what would you do/conclude if you dont believe in psychics and hippie mumbo jumbo but had a vision(in my case a dream) that came true about a massive world event and even had a voice (your own voice) saying "do not forget this this is important"
it happened to me. much as i dont believe in that type of thing but i do believe strange quantum mechanics are possible so idk.
i know theres alota humans and alota dreams each night must be alota coincidences but this was strrrrrange.
wasnt like any dream i ever had exactly, had the intensity of a really bad nightmare but not a nightmare feeling, and i was very conscious during the dream and after i awoke. even remembered it after a few days unlike most dreams that disappear fast.
and couple other things add some weirdness to it.
"Why do you ask 'what?"
"When the delicious question is 'when?"
"The only difference between past and present..."
"...is semantics."
"Lives. Live. Will Live."
"Dies. Died. Will Die."
"If we could perceive time as it truly was..."
"...what reason would grammar professors have to get out of bed in the morning. "
-name that quote
“As if you have any choice” Did... did Eck just threaten us... with safety?
Loved the story. As a strong believer is "Block Spacetime" it resonates with me - I think you must live as if you have agency even if the reality is you do not have it. Any action that you takes that does not make tomorrow better did not make tomorrow better.
I cannot describe how much I love this channel
Love these short stories, keep up the good work!
Just found out the there is going to be a discussion about Arrival at Ohio State featuring several professors fro the linguistics and astronomy departments next week. I will be sure to attend (on Zoom of course), should be a good discussion.
The next sci fi short you should do should be The Road Not Taken
by Harry Turtledove!
I suggest a breakdown of the Shimmer from Annihilation.
Annihilation is pretentious.
@@TheRezro the book series is really good.
@@mitchb6 I've just finished the trilogy for the second time and took notes, so it's coming.
@@EckhartsLadder I take it, it's a good read.
ive seen one or two but dont think anyone really mentioned why some alien intelligence or even nature would do something like that, they just always explain the movie.
wouldnt it be for rapid evolution?
what else could it be for? intelligent flowers?
Man I love this movie. The pacing, the music, and the acting. So good.
Arrival always made me think of Babel 17 by Delany. They both deal with a language that affects how you perceive time and reality.
Your video made me want to both read the book and see the movie- thank you, because I know I will. I frequently reread books that obviously I already know the ending of, and the ending of it’s sequels, etc- but I always explain it to people who ask why, that it’s because I enjoy the feeling that it gives me every time. It’s like visiting a place that I’ve been before, and love being there. It doesn’t matter that I know the ending, because it doesn’t have to have one- I can always start it over, and I eventually always do. Before the movies came out, that’s how the Lord of the Rings was to me. I’ve always been a very advanced reader, and read The Hobbit in second grade (1982- seems so long ago) and LOTR finally in fourth grade- and I revisited that world in full once every year since, but also dipping in just to read parts of it multiple times throughout the year- it was a place that I felt comfortable in, and it has always brought me a lot of joy. I know it isn’t exactly the same as the idea of this movie (and book), but it makes me think of that feeling. Anyway- thanks again for sharing this video- I’m looking forward to seeing and reading this. I hope that you and your family are safe and healthy- take care!
I've not read the book, but I have watched the movie. I was still in my mid teens when the movie came out, and had only read the intro to the book before brushing it aside. Watching the movie then made no sense to me, it seemed to confusing. However, looking back at the movie, and seeing the genius behind how it was filmed and how it relates to human life in so many different way opens ur eyes to view things in a different way. Honestly, this movie deserves way more credit then it has received, and in a way, is a hidden gem.
If you haven't I highly recommend watching the movie again. I found myself in just as much awe the second time as I was the first.
Forrest Edgar I was a sobbing mess when I first watched it, yes it was confusing at first but I was able to get it. I want to watch it again now
Love all your videos! I think a return to factions compared would be cool, but with new factions outside of StarWars, like StarCraft or Sins of a Solar Empire.
Given this is a major a StarWars channel, let's assume that there is some intersection between SW fans and people who appreciated Arrival. Then why would be inconcievable to some people that SW fans were nor satisfied with the shortcomings on the Disney trilogy once theu had Arrival as partial benchmark,
I just bought this video a few days ago and watched it. It was not what i expected and and it turned out much bettet than I was ever hoping it could have been.
I didn't know that Eck liked arrival. I hope it gets a sequel. "Session 38" I'd call it.
How about session 69
Very deep thought. Amazing story. Time to take the trip down the rabbit hole and use your link to the book. Hope you have a good one!
Well thought out and presented video, the quality of your work is beyond consistent
Wanted a summary of the story for my class and wow my hockey guy showed up, really cool to see you Eck, thanks!
Ooh I’m so glad you made a video on that story! I really enjoyed it. Would love to see more reviews of science fiction stories.
honestly wish i could sometimes wipe my memory of ever watching Arrival just so i can get that amazing twist for the first time again and again
I bought this book in England and read it as we sailed the Irish Sea. This one and the rest of the stories in the book are small masterpieces. Love the video, Eck! It was cool getting to revisit and ponder this sci-fi gem.
This movie was so fantastic. Nice work summing it up. You should do some more stuff outside of the usual Star Wars content, it's really good.
Two points you raise at the very end. I don't think the aliens telling Louise that the child is her future daugther lessens the message. At that point, imo it is really a message to the dumb dumbs, because you can kinda start figuring the whole thing out already. Maybe the spelling it out method of delivery is too on the nose, almost patronizing, but as far as the message goes, if you hadn't realised by then, you will be surprised anyway.
As for them needing humanity in the future, I think it is sufficiently vague, I don't think it ruins the point. We don't even know how humanity helps them. For all we know, learning human language and thus the ability to perceive time from a human pov is already how humanity helps them in the future. If anything, the books version strongly hint shade at it while the movie leaves it actually more open. In the text version, after learning "human" and having a human learn to speak "alien", they just piss off without an explanation. Sounds strongly that they got what they wanted, they delivered the "payment", deal is done, the end. The alternative is one of those endings I just find really annoying "so I don't feel like writing anything else really, so just make up your own stuff! That is why you're buying a book, so you can imagine things in your head all by yourself just like you were before you even got the book, ain't I clever" (have I said I hate those endings). With the movie's version, there is room for imagination, but there is an imagination prompt, and that I very much prefer.
I had the biggest argument ever with my father about this movie, because we had different understandings for this movie
Hi eck love your content hope you keep Createing videos for years to come.
I hope so too!
I agree with this person
congrats on the baby
Arrival ... a truly underrated philosophical masterpiece (both the novel and the movie) 🧐😊
I love your videos so much that I would never want to criticize but the aliens actually called heptapods not hetapods
That makes so much more sense.
Came to the comments to look for this lol
Maybe he was pronouncing it with a silent "p"?
The thing is he pronounced it correctly the very last time he said it, what's that about?
I watched this movie on a road trip at night. That REALLY helped to add to the tone of this really strange but also kinda cool movie.
What I found most fascinating was that the movie seemed to also be an homage to Slaughterhouse-Five. The aliens, as conceived in the movie, are aptly described by Vonnegut, "an eyestalk atop a body shaped like a hand". Not only that, but the Tralfamadorians of Vonnegut's writing were similarly unbound from linear causality, describing human perception of time as 'a man strapped to a train and forced to look through a keyhole, only seeing the smallest and most immediate unit of time, instead of being able to view the entire landscape'.
Haven't read the book but wonderful movie. I didn't know what to expect going in fresh and was not disappointed. Great video on the subject of causality vs. predetermination!
Love how you dissect topics man. Also congrats on being a new papa!!
Great video! You should do more videos on different topics like this!
Thanks for making a video about one of my favorite movies
Woah, this one is sooo refreshing....pls make more of em
Loved this movie. Never read the book. But I was blown away by the film. Reminded me strongly of the Aang-ti monks from starwars and their views on the Force. Wonder if there is some inspiration here
The movie was good, but I like the short story better. I understand why the movie had to create a conflict that wasn't present in the short story, but I think the short story is better because having no conflict in the story allows the reader to just feel the melancholy of it all.
Celebrate the joy before the sadness.....
Look at Eck flexing that big brain. You show 'em!
Makes me wonder what would happen if thrawn would somehow encounter the hetapods
Bro I love Arrival and I love Eck, and he loves it too??? My day has been made
Eckhart making an Arrival video?
A surprise to be sure, but a welcome one.
Both the short story and the movie are some of the best of recent science fiction. I didn't like the changes made in the movie though - particularly removing the looking glass devices seemed to change the dynamics of the plot quite a bit - arguably the communication scenes from the story would probably look hilarious on the screen, which wouldn't be good for the overall tone.
Hell yah, an arrival video
Hello Eck, have you ever read a pair of short stories by Harry Turtledove called "Counting Up" and "Counting Down". The stories are bookends in a collection of the same name and address an interesting take on time travel with alternate points of view from the same character past and future.
Plus another recommendation from the same author "The Road Not Taken" is a short story that is an interesting flip on the first contact/alien invasion story.
I think about how awesome too a story like this would have been set in the Star Trek or Star Wars universes. An alien craft shows up at each of the major planets in the galaxy and Picard and crew try decipher their language, changing them all irrevocably along the way.
Eck, you would like the Garden of Sinners movie series. The 8th movie in particular deals in similar concepts to the headopod method of thinking.
I usually watch all your Star Wars videos. But I really like this movie and enjoy a change of pace from you. I'll give the story a read.
I haven't read the book, but i watched the movie just to properly watch this video, and it brought me to tears as i tried to understand the feeling of having a non-linear sense of time and of your own life, it gave me the same feeling as the short story named "The Egg" (that you can find an animated version of in Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell channel), just, the feeling of you or me, being part of a whole, like something similar to the end of Evangelion, feeling the time and the experience of an entire life, or rather of the entire humanity inside your soul is... I don't know, astonishing, to big to explain on human words hahahahaha great video
Do Heptapods vs The Flood next.
I’m eleven now and still have only seen the movie once, it is a great movie I want to watch it again because I haven’t it in 4 years.
Please do more videos like this.
I personally am a subscriber to the thought that what we do is a result of simple physical reactions, that me typing this comment was inevitable from the beginning of everything. If you were able to know the velocity and position of every particle in the universe(which is against the known laws of physics), then you too would know of this inevitability, and would be able to write a book describing every past, present and future event. Most people who see this deterministic thinking as sad, something that would make a person cynical, immobile, depressed, but I feel non of those things personally because of two reasons. The first being that I feel like I have a choice in the matter even if my actions are just me completing a prophecy, in other words, I don’t know the future, so as far as I know, I’m writing my own destiny, even if the standard model of physics tells me it’s already been written. The second reason is simply that I often forget about everything I just said until someone brings it up.
Yup...
That simple.
So I kinda understand the thinking of the headapodes, though the whole baby not born yet thing is still confusing me.
Quantum physics says hello, and says Newtonian physics is for newbs.
@@khadenallast4495 while it is true that quantum physics has a bearing on determinism, it doesn't on the matter of freedom of will. Quantum physics does bring in the factor of chance on the lowest level with the two possible states, but chance can hardly be the cause for deliberation. Hence, a freedom of will based on chance would be only a perceived freedom again.
Hi Quantum!!!! You’re extremely confusing and unintuitive and I hate you but hi!!!
Did you know that the Reapers harvest sentient life in the milky way galaxy every 50 thousand years
I really enjoyed this movie, thanks for the upload!
This was a beautiful video honestly
The Story of your life is a brilliant short story in the book...but the one "Hell is the absence of God" was also great. In all a brilliant collection of short Sci FI stories. Well recommend it 👍
Hey Eck...I came across this channel yesterday. Its a guy by the name of Felipe Gomez. He makes from scratch models of Star Wars ships and vehicles. His creations look awesome. Maybe check him out and give him some promotion on your channel. He is the MCHenry of the physical model (versus virtual model) world but he has only like 790 subscribers but his work is phenomenol. He deserves some exposure to the wider Star Wars community. 👍 The link to his creation of the Super Star Destroyer is below.
ruclips.net/video/xXKPqqJVolE/видео.html
Loved the different content!
The Aliens were basically the Prophets from Star Trek Deep Space Nine.
Does the path choose the walker, or the walker choose the path? Both and neither.
If all paths already exist, does the walking change anything, nothing, or everything? Yes.
You should do one like this for annihilation it's got a lot of cool concepts like this
Heptapod. HEPtaPOD. HEPTAPOD. SEVEN LIMBS. HEPT. HEPT!
Absolutly amasing video men!!!
Fantastic movie!!!
This is an amazing video, thank you.
I get that the story brings up important questions of free will versus fate and the value of living a life that we know will be brief and full of pain, but the fact that learning a language with circular symbols lets you see the future is just so goofy that I had a hard time taking the story seriously.
One of my favorite movies
Very good vid. I’ve seen the movie but have not heard of the book.
What happened to that link in the description for the book? I know I could just search for it on amazon, but if you have an affiliate link, I would rather support you in that way.
#askeck If you've ever played Space Engineers, do you think the Venator would be a good capital ship for PvE?
Very great video, you did the concept and source material justice. Take it with a grain of salt, because I’ve only seen the movie.
I think in sci fi, it is much cooler to have aliens that aren’t anthropomorphic. Sometimes it seems like just a recreation of the fantasy genre in sci fi to have mass effect style aliens make up most of the known races.
It seems much more likely that aliens, intelligent extraterrestrials, would be completely different in their perceptions and the motivations arising from their biology.