REACTING TO *Annihilation* DOES THIS MAKE SENSE? (First Time Watching) Sci-fi Movies
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- čas přidán 27. 09. 2023
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James, Nobu, Hayley, and Stella are reacting to Annihilation and does this movie make any sense? Enjoy this first time watching Sci-fi movies reaction to Annihilation starring Natalie Portman and Oscar Isaac!
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What is your favorite cosmic horror movie?
Underwater was pretty good
Dark Waters (1993) is a really good one.
Alien ( 1979 ) a classic.
Event Horizon is also pretty hard-core.
Color Out Of Space with Nic Cage.
One ending explanation that I love most :
Notice when alien is copying Lena, first it mirrors her every action. But as it turns more human, background music changes from synth to human and the alien also shows signs of independent action as he doesn't mirror her every action but still copying her thoughts and personality.
That's why its palm is reversed as it accepts the grenade. Why did it do that? Because she was suicidal, depressed and guilt ridden over cheating on Oscar (which led to his death as he took the mission to go away) and alien accidentally copied her biggest trait : to burn her own house down!
Hence the main alien doesn't bother with fire and instead of running or extinguishing the fire, goes into the deepest part of his layer.
"Isn't self destruction coded into us?"
Her cheating saved the world, woohoo.
Just one interpretation ofcourse!
Also I believe in the ending, Oscar was a copy and Natalie was a mutation.
That's interesting but problem I have with that theory is that for me the alien doesn't have any motivation. It just is what it is. Mixing up everything it comes into contact with. Sometimes beautifully, sometimes horrifically. But that measure is completely subjective. With this expedition into Area X, the team is revealed to be self-destructive and our biggest flaws become the biggest asset to destroy the shimmer. Kane having a southern accent and Lena having Anyas tattoo are physical manifestations of that, and we also get their monologues that they thenselves don't even know who or what they are anymore because their minds are also spliced as well.
@@brooklynnewyork23 At the end of the day, it doesn't matter if Lena is a copy or not because the point is that she is no longer the same person anyway. She and Isaac are both irreversibly and forever changed by their experiences and metaphorically didn't survive.
I didn't latch onto this on my first viewing, but my theory is similar to yours, except that the trait it copied from Lena was her desire to destroy the Shimmer. As one of the characters observed earlier, "Ventress wants to face it, you [Lena] want to fight it." But that can still go hand-in-hand with Lena's own self-destructiveness and guilt.
Yea, it's the old War-of-the-Worlds-trope, which doesn't even feel cliche when it's done well like it is here. Apparently humanity sucks so bad this thing unalived itself in the end really
The selfdestruction is coded into our DNA to fight of rouge cells mutating beyond control. Cancer is simply cells where that safeguard has failed.
That bear scene is the only scene I saw in theaters where I actively looked away form the screen. Something mixed with the design of the bear and the terrifying aspect of it mimicking the last screams of its prey just got me. One of the scariest movie monsters hands down.
That bear scene was terryfying to me. And I watched the Alien chestbursters scene when I was 10...
its highly possible that it wasn’t mimicking cass but that cass merged with the bear as the shimmer merged stuff’s dna
@@jiji7250I assumed it merged vocal cords when she was killed and dragged away from the group. They did find the body next to a tree outside later.
@@napostrophen More than that, if you look on the left brow of the bear, there is a partial human skull sharing the orbital bone with the bear skull, teeth and all. The bear had spliced in human Cassie's DNA and had developed similar physiological traits with Cassie specifically, hence the identical voice.
yeah, pretty much it
I do think the copy died, but Lena is forever changed by having been in the shimmer. The tattooo that formed on her came from one of the other members of her team originally. The shimmer was just grabbing stuff and mixing it all together, and randomly splicing those features into everything that was inside it, with items close to each other getting the most sharing (hence the bear that tore out the woman's throat getting her voice). I personally believe that, ultimately, Lena brought the shimmer out with her -- when she stood right next to the heart of it and stared into it, it became part of her. I think her husband was a copy, but she was somehow infused with its essence while still remaining mostly herself. The only real question is why she survived when no one else did, but that might just be a device to show us that in the end, it's not the end -- the shimmer goes on, the alien is among us.
I agree. I think Kane is the ‘copy’ and Lena is the original but mutated.
I think the bear and every other being inside survived too and idk if they managed to control the area... birds an bugs might definitely get out into the world.
That's what makes this movie eerie and unsettling, that this world is f*ked because the Shimmer will continue to slowly affect everything.
The tattoo was on the body that was "blooming" in the military base swimming pool.
@@changsangma1915 I think once the Shimmer's field / Area X is gone, the mutations are no longer possible (and thus won't spread to the world). But then again I don't know much about this movie so maybe you're right
The Screaming Bear: Nightmare Fuel!😱
After watching the bear scene I had to watch about an hour of Disney videos 😊
@@barrysheppard7574 Oops, if you see anything from STALKER, you'll be traumatized for life then.
Dude istg when I first watched that I was FU****
Aint no regular bear. That was "Shimmer Demon Boar Bear". 😅
Agreed
This movie was actually scary, especially that bear scene.
I didn't get this movie the first time I watched, like at all. My tiny teen brain was too confused.
ikr, theres just something so creepy about the indifference of predators.
Man, I forgot how uncomfortable that made me until I just saw it again here. NOTHING ABOUT IT IS RIGHT.
@@thdenwheja756 the whole movie was pretty unsettling but that scene takes the cake
It is a horror movie tho.. scifi horror..
This is one of those movies where it's best to look at from a poetic, metaphorical lens instead of a science fiction "this is how it works" lens. It's a vibes movie, not a lore movie. The shimmer is unknowable, incomprehensible, a true eldritch being. It doesn't even seem to seek harm, it just is, and it is incompatible with us. It rejects understanding.
But above all it's metaphor. Annihilation is its title. Self-destruction. Change. Trauma. Cancer. Grief. Death. Almost everything in this movie has a double meaning that tie into its themes. As Dan Olsen says in his fantastic video "Annihilation and Decoding Metaphor", which I highly recommend, "in this movie, metaphorical IS textual".
Focusing on lore ruins cosmic horror. Its the sense of dread and things aren't right. It's the Monty Hall problem but it's infected all of reality. Plotting out C'thulu's family tree ruins it.
Very well said.
You nailed it. The Shimer IS the being.
People seem to think the mimic is an entity, alien or living thing. It isn't. It's a complicated duplication of Lena created by her interaction with the source of the Shimer.
Just want to reiterate it. You nailed it. The being is the Shimer. The mimick is NOT the bring. The Shimer is.
Apparently the film had some behind the scenes drama between David Ellison of Skydance who co-financed the film with Paramount and Scott Rudin the producer of the film during a test screening in the Summer of 2017. Ellison became concerned that the movie was “too intellectual” and “too complicated,” and wanted changes made to make it appeal to a wider audience which included making Portman’s character more sympathetic as well as tweaking the ending.
Rudin on the other hand who was Alex Garland’s cheerleader and also produced _Ex Machina,_ sided with Garland, defending the movie and refused to take notes. Paramount who was caught in the middle of the conflict eventually decided to sold the international distribution rights to Netflix where it was streamed instead of being released to theaters while Paramount retained the theatrical rights in the US and Canada and China where the film underperformed at the box office.
I would love if all four of you would react to _Ex Machina_ on the channel which was also directed by Alex Garland and starring Oscar Isaac who appeared in _Annihilation_
I have to say it is really refreshing how empathetic you all are to the different characters, as opposed to others judging or hating on them and making fun the entire time.😊
Yeah, it’s really refreshing
because some viewers as i can read from comments could find this garbage actually "good" ... so better be empathetic.
@@_TheJp_ Ahh, one of those who has to look down his nose at people who like things you don't. I hope it's fun being you.
@@Corn_Pone_Flicks well for sure is more fun to be me than answer back nonsense because someone doesn't understand a damn about simple plain text.
@@_TheJp_ the audacity you have to judge other peoples tastes when you have the most online profile pic
My favorite part about the bear scene is that the bear isn’t using Cass’ last words intentionally. It doesn’t know what syllables are words together and what order they go in. It’s just using the sounds without any context, screaming the ‘me’ out of ‘help me’ and using her screams intermixed. It’s just a creature ultimately, even if it held a shard of her voice in the moment of her death.
That’s just terrifying to me. Like Josie said, Cass died in fear and pain and that was the only thing that survived her death. Nothing about her intelligence and kindness in life.
To me that mirrors the alien. Like Ventress said she doesn't think it wants. I don't think the alien MEANT any harm its just toxic to us by existing.
@@LangkeeLongkeethat’s true! they didn’t have any concept of what they were doing particularly , just following their natural path. I’m sure the bear didn’t mean to absorb Cass’ last impression, surely just being a victim of the refractions.
I love how much better this film is on a second watch. Little details like the fact that the bear scene takes place in a house that is identical to Lena’s, that’s why she looks confused when she walks in and checks the art on the walls. It's her house, just mutated. It’s a copy, an emulation, but it’s not quite there. Also the bear has a human skull growing out of the side of its own, sharing an eye. Neat touches to drive home the theme.
I think Kane has a bear tattoo as well, on his chest or shoulder.
56:21 You're not missing it, Stella. You're spot-on here. The movie *_doesn't_* give any clues to "solve" what's going on.
There are things in it to understand at an intellectual level, but more importantly there are things there to understand on an emotional level.
It's about the loss of self, through physical destruction, mental destruction, escape from who you are or acceptance that you're never going to be the same, for whatever reason. Essentially, the entire movie is a metaphor for that loss of self.
one of the important clues is the ouroboros tattoo. Ouroboros is a gnostic and alchemical symbol that expresses the unity of all things, material and spiritual, which never disappear but perpetually change form in an eternal cycle of destruction and re-creation.
Every so often, a great scifi movie is allowed onto the big screen. Annihilation is one of them.
If you notice and re watch the bear scene, there’s a human skull fused on the right side of its face. It almost has a semi formed eye ball in it as well. Almost as if it absorbed Cass before she died
From what i have heard, in the books its explained that the people the bear eats become a part of it.
This is my favorite alien movie by far, because it's SO alien. Such perfect cosmic horror. And I agree, the imagery alone would make it worth the watch. Beautiful, horrific, fascinating. I also loved how deeply you engaged with the movie in your reaction, thank you for that.
My theory is that when we lose track of the alien, when we perceive "her" coming out of the hole, we switch perspectives. The alien is then shown trying to prevent her from leaving. That is actually the original, but she looks alien to the new "her". When she fully understands this, she accepts her old self is too injured and must die so the new self can live the way her original husband did, while he was talking to his new self.
Neat theory, and it does explain the alien being out of the hole before her. But I think there's the issue of the shimmer being destroyed. If the original her died and the copy lived how was the shimmer destroyed? Her husband died and the copy left but the shimmer remained. I'm pretty sure the reason it disappeared is the alien inherited her suicidal thoughts and desire to destroy the shimmer, and so spread the phosphorous to the shimmer's heart (the whole chamber Ventress was found in) and killed it.
Also, the alien copy has awkward, slightly delayed movements early on while it's still learning to mimic her. If what we see as the alien was the original, why would she be imitating the alien instead of trying to run away?
I've always found the ending ot this movie weirdly comforting. The original couple (possibly standing in for humanity in general?) failed miserably in its propensity for self-destruction. Maybe the alien clone Adam and Eve will do better.
the alien is trying to emulate their feelings and emotions so they are "themselves" but not themselves. I think the takeaway is that self destructive tendencies are part of human nature, and it's inevitable within everyone. Natalie Portman's character destroyed the crystal hive so maybe the shimmer stopped spreading. but Natalie and her husband are stuck as half formed alien chameleons of themselves forever. A scar from going into the shimmer willingly (sui****)
The ending is tough to understand but essentially she’s no the same Lena from the beginning. Technically she’s the original but she’s mutated beyond what she was in the begin of the movie. All in all, the movie was a great adaptation from the book but the book is definitely more terrifying than the movie. Then entire lighthouse became an actual living and breathing life form. It was actually insane getting through all of it.
The Screaming Bear reminds me of the giant killer mutant bear Katahdin from the 1979 environmental horror thriller PROPHECY, where an EPA scientist and his wife discover animals in Maine being mutated from 20 years of industrial pollution.
YES! I remember PROPHECY, I was 11 years old and actually read the novel version back then. That mutant bear has STILL remained in my brain all these years later, I can't help but wonder if the makers of this film referenced it.
The disturbing part of the movie wasn't the monsters it was the motivations for each person getting to a point in their lives where the damage was too great to bare.
I once heard a story told by a young women who had severe emotional damage. She was married and gave into the flirtations of a co-worker and had a physical affair. The guilt was eating her alive and she knew she had to confess her betrayal to her husband but before she could, he confronted her with the evidence of her affair. She described the pain on his face and the emotions behind his eyes. He calmly got up and walked out of the house and three days later he committed suicide. His family wouldn't even tell her where he was buried. She was trying to live with the fact that she did this, she destroyed their lives. Like the movie character Leana did.
She can never have peace, never have closure. It's the worm that never dies. That's the disturbing part of the movie.
Whoever came up with the Bear is a horror genius
I remember watching this and feeling so confused. I felt like an idiot.
That's kinda the point tho innit. I hate when people HAVE to ascribe some meaning to everything in a piece of art. The best art has no meaning, it just makes you feel a certain way
Its cosmic horror. Thats how it is supposed to be. Lovecraft made it a point to say they are beyond human understanding. The genre is based on that central point! You are not an idiot.
Nope. Not an idiot. It’s a waste of film, if SD cards weren’t cheap as chips it never would have been made. Nobody would pay for film to park it.
Your not an idiot. Not even the writers understand the movie. The people who say they do just want to sound cool and feel like they are in some kind of smart peoples club.
@@TheNichq Keep telling yourself that.
Such an awesome mind-bending film, with terrific terror to boot!
I wish there were more movies like this, not so much the mind melting adventure but the way people can make normal function become alien. Like the bear with a human skull attached to it with the victim's voice, the flower-deer, and the shark-o-dile. Super creepy, but also fulfills that desire for creativity.
This movie is a bit like a 21th century Stalker.
I wonder how much of what happened inside the shimmer with all expeditions (prior and the protagonist's) reflected the fact it was probably treated like suicide mission by everybody involved, crews and people sending them alike. Because who would volunteer for a mission like that? Only a person who has nothing to return to in first place. That's imho why Kane volunteered to go "right now"; he learned of his wife cheating. To me that's an answer to the question asked by the interrogator, why she's first and only to return: Natalie Portman's character found herself in the camp involuntarily and her own death wasn't on her mind at all. She simply was the only one wanting to return.
Screaming Bear = Shit in my pants. 😢
The movie tagline
This movie blew my mind when I first saw it! It's so beautiful and the whole cell division, cancer and existentialism thing had me philosophizing for a while! I mostly get caught up this: in cell division the mother cell becomes two daughter cells, implying in some way that the mother cell is 'lost'. What if when you enter the shimmer, you get lost in that way? Like you're still you until you are not anymore, if that makes sense. A cell in division is still that cell until it is two cells. And those cells are kind of the same, but not? I could go on for hours about this movie, it's so amazing!
I did a paper in college on this movie. The main focus was to try and define what the alien was, where it came from, motivations, needs, etc. I really picked a hard movie for that assignment but it was absolutely worth it 😂
And what did you learn about it?
Ooh! I'd love to hear a bit more about that!
im invested in reading this.
If you look at The Shimmer as a metaphor for cancer. It all fits like your interpretation, which I agree with.
What conclusion did you come to? Is your paper available anywhere?
I really got into the math, biology, landscapes, and aesthetics of fractals, so that was my lens watching this. Also, the books of Stanislaw Lem (Polish sci-if) who wrote alien/worlds as truly alien and ultimately impossible to fully understand.
Solaris is a personal favorite of mine. I like both the Russian and American adaptations in different ways
From a Polish perspective: the American adaptation actually understands the novel better (and apparently Lem preferred it - he never saw the complete Tarkovsky movie and he called Soderbergh's vision "complete") There is also an earlier Soviet tv adaptation, which is probably the most faithful... on a Soviet tv theatre budget.@@Heritage367
Yep, Solaris is awesome.@@Heritage367
@@Heritage367 Same! It's one of the few times where different approaches to the same story both worked so well. Soderbergh's version is worth it for the music alone.
Worth noting this is James and Nobu’s first Horror movie reaction in 8-10 months as Nobu’s last horror movie he reacted was _Scream_ and James last horror film reaction was _Barbarian_ and throughout the first 6 months of 2023 it was the Girls (Hailey and Stella) that did the reactions to the Horror films.
I definitely would like to see James and Nobu do more Horror films reactions on the channel.
Stella's high pitched squeak:
"What do you mean it's just a crocodile?"🐊
Lol me too.
The bear! 😱 It's one of the scariest things I've ever seen. The dread and horror, omg. The screams 😫 Traumatizing.
I highly recommend the HP Lovecraft cosmic horror The Color Out Of Space with Nic Cage.
Love this movie, a truly unique alien is hard to come by in sci-fi and it makes this movie special. An alien that is in contant change and mutation, it trys to mimic, it ends up annilating itself because it changed beyond its own ability to control. Leta has become like the alien, part herself and part everything that was in the shimmer.
Yes a good sequel to this movie, would be those two trying to live normal human lives. While trying to grapple with their need to copy people.
YES! I'm so happy you decided to check this one out! This IS my favourite cosmic horror movie. It might not all make sense from a scientific point but rather from a psychological and philosophical point of view. It's very metaphoric, especially at the end. Alex Garland himself said that this is a story about self destruction. And that's why Lena was able to "defeat" the creature, because it copied her and she kinda passed her self destructive traits on to the mimic. There is a lot more going on beneath the surface of the story, most of it is told by visuals and not in dialogue. The studio wanted Garland to change the movie because it was "too intellectual" but I'm glad they didn't do it because it's very thought provoking as it is. As a result - it didn't get a theatrical release in a lot of countries though. Sadly. I would have loved to see that in the cinema. I think this is a very underrated piece of art and I hope people will appreciate it more over time. Especially in this time of recycled ideas, remakes, reboots and sequels.
The point is that they both had to come back to eachother. He had to come back to her, but he came back as a copy, and she destroyed it the copier, but absorbed some of the ladies she ventured in there with during her time.
The bear was for sure the most terrifying scene but the realization at the end that her husband in the beginning may not actually be the original is haunting lol
Annihilation is VERY CLEARLY based on H.P. Lovecraft's 'The Color Out Of Space'.
It's a VERY slightly different version of the same story.
It's ALMOST setup like a sequel to a parallel event.
'The Color' takes place in Lovecraft Country (in Massachusetts).
'Annihilation' takes place in Florida.
So it's kinda like 2 separate "alien colors" came down in separate places.
The one in Lovecraft Country wasn't left alone, so stuff went crazy fast on a smaller more local scale.
The one is Florida was out in the middle of nowhere and allowed to fester and spread and get worse for a long time, and Annihilation is sort of the aftermath.
'The Color Out Of Space' was also recently adapted into a movie with Nic Cage. It's fucking insane.
I recommend checking that one out too. You'll see what I mean.
If you squint, you can almost treat this movie as a prequel to Moon Knight and Thor:Love & Thunder. As if this is why Marc Spector is insane, and why Jane got sick. lol
The director, Alex Garland is a goddamn genius.
The directorial credit for Dredd ON PAPER goes to some other guy, but it is lowkey fairly well known and understood that Alex Garland was the REAL director of Dredd, and that Dredd was his directorial debut.
Between Dredd, Ex Machina, and Annihilation, Alex Garland has one of the most insanely high quality track records out of any director ever.
In fact, it drinks TOO much from the STALKER saga, be it the games, the movie or the Roadside Picnic novel.
Moreover, in an interview with the author, he contradicted himself when asked if he knew Stalker or Picnic, and said he did not know them, but another previous interview, he said he did, which leads many to believe that there was some plagiarism.
Obviously, the brother who was still alive at the time, Boris Strugaski, did not care, and on the contrary he was flattered by the "inspiration".
And yes, obviously, Picnic has its recognized inspiration from Lovecraft.
you know the movie is based off a book of the same name right?
It’s based on a book of the same name
@@theCatastrophe3030 It may pretend to, but it's a version of 'The Color Out Of Space'.
I haven't read the book, but everyone says the movie is only vaguely related to the book.
So... 🤷♂ I have no comment on the book. Maybe that's a knock-off of 'The Color Out Of Space too for all I know.
Or maybe it's not.
The movie however is undeniably VERY directly a version of 'The Color Out Of Space'.
Anyone who says otherwise is either unfamiliar with the material or intentionally full of shit.
@@CapitalExpression It may pretend to, but it's a version of 'The Color Out Of Space'.
I haven't read the book, but everyone says the movie is only vaguely related to the book.
So... 🤷♂ I have no comment on the book. Maybe that's a knock-off of 'The Color Out Of Space too for all I know.
Or maybe it's not.
The movie however is undeniably VERY directly a version of 'The Color Out Of Space'.
Anyone who says otherwise is either unfamiliar with the material or intentionally full of shit.
I read the books first so obligatory “the books are better” but this is an excellent film. It’s an incredible interpretation and I feel should stand alone as a separate piece of art. Mainly because an enormously important physical structure, journey, and character development take place in the books that just doesn’t happen in the movie, but I couldn’t have really been put in the movie anyway. Hence my feelings.
I've heard repeatedly that the first book is decent, but that the sequels get worse with each one.
@@tophers3756 I’d say the second one is a bit of a lull but the third one is good. The second one lingers too long on unnecessary world-building.
For those who don’t understand about the bear seen, when it ate Casses throat it ate her larynx which contains humans vocal cords it then reconstructed it’s DNA with of her DNA (that’s why there is a human skull on the bears right side)while it remembered her last screams for help before she was killed to also use as bait for the others. (Hoped this was helpful to anyone who was confused)
I don't think the bear intentionally used her voice for bait I think it was just existing and making sounds. Like I don't think the alien meant to kill them either its just dangerous as it is.
*scene*
Reminds me on Tarkovsky's dystopian classic "Stalker" (1979) which I rewatch every couple of years. Also, a famous videogame "S.T.A.L.K.E.R". There's this "zone" after a meteorite impact, and it's full of traps. Entering it is forbidden but "stalkers" illegally smuggle people into it because there's an idea that within the Zone there's a room that figures out and makes your deepest wish come true. Stalker's daughter is a mutant and does telekinesis. So, anyway, this parallels "Stalker" as well as "Colour Out Of Space".
It is that the author of the Southern Reach trilogy, a little bit that he let it be seen that he copied or was inspired by Roadside Picnic.
It wouldn't have been wrong for him to do so, since when Boris Strugasky, the only one of the Picnic brothers still alive, was asked, he took it as a compliment to be copied.
But, Jeff VanderMeer, the author of Annihilation in a couple of interviews contradicted himself, which for many, makes it clear that there was some kind of copy.
And although both stories may seem the same on the surface, in their plots they are different enough.
On the other hand, the Zone in the games, and in the novel, is not created from the fall of a meteorite.
In the games, I won't mention it so as not to give spoilers.
But in the novel, there is no right or exact answer. It is presumed, by the most widespread or most logical theory by scientists, that it was a visit of very, very, very, very advanced aliens. The "reality" is that there is no exact or unique origin for the creation of the Zone, because it is something that defies human logic.
Stalker is based on the book "Roadside Picnic" by Arkady Strugatsky and Boris Strugatsky. It's one of my favorite books.
I have to re-read the book then.
Interesting
Was a good adaptation of the first book... wish they'd done all 3 tbh
One of the best scify stories I've read
Sadly since the movie flopped at the box office that killed any plans to sdapt the rest of the book series.
@45:43
Totally random intrusive thought, but at this point in the video, the way "Oh my gosh!" was said reminded me of the way Jennifer Coolidge said, "Oh my God! You look like the Fourth of July...." in Legally Blonde 2.
The bear is by far my most favorite piece in this incredible movie. Between the mimicry it uses to fool its prey, and the decaying body, it is truly a thing out of nightmares. I remember my hairs standing up as the noise it made echoed through the theater. I really will never experience such a movie again in theaters. This is truly a masterpiece. 💜
I really love when it's the four of you, it feels like I'm with friends having epic conversations about movies. The one with 2001 and this one are my favourites!
The best way to explain what was happening: imagine there’s a table full of two liter sodas.
All different flavors, some sodas even off brands of official flavors.
Now imagine there’s a robot who is mixing the flavors, half and half. Some liters are filled up full half and half, and then mixed with another bottle. New flavors are being made over time and new mixes are suddenly in bottles that were empty.
None of those bottles will never be filled to two liters, and those that are, aren’t 100% what was originally in the bottle to begin with.
Lena was coke, slowly mixing with other flavors over time, changing her even though she’s the same person. Shes like one of those bottles, you might be able to taste an original flavor, but something new is mixed in forever now.
Cane is different. Cane is all the off brand sodas being combined, trying to copy an official flavor. Cane was Dr.Pepper.
The Cane at the end of the movie was Dr.D, Dr. PHD, it was Dr. Whatever, trying to be the original taste everyone else knows best. But it’s not really Dr. Pepper.
Yes it makes sense.
Your point at the end about how this is such a vague film that doesn't leave clues to explain what happened, is exactly what i love most about this film. It doesn't feel the need to spoon feed you closure and instead asks you to make up your own mind about what "The Shimmer" really is as well as the effect it has on humans. I'm a pro ambiguity person when it comes to stories, especially if it's done well as opposed to just shoehorned cliffhangers that are done to set up unnecessary sequels or spin offs. I highly recommend Ex Machina as well done by the same writer/director Alex Garland. A true work of art that is one of the best science fiction films of my lifetime.
Oh hey I requested this!!! I didnt even think you were gunna react to this!
Poor Stella bouncing in her seat to not give anything away, heh love all of you guys. Thanks for the vid
The Tattoo was originally on Anya and also on the soldier cut open in the video. It gradually emerges on Lena, fist starting as a bruise. The shimmer was merging aspects of people within it.
Loved Stella's contributions this video, the movie definitely takes on a different twist after you've already seen it!
Finally someone has reacted to this masterpiece of a movie!
It's interesting seeing all these people say the bear scene was super scary because the scene that i found the most scary and unsettling was Lena trying to get out of the lighthouse.
Fanrtastic reaction! I loved your editing and 4-screen setup, too, as well as the after-show analysis. It made me want to watch more of your reactions!
What I found the most disturbing with the bear is how, when its shot and stumbling, before it falls you can faintly hear "Help! It... HURTS!"
Incredible sci fi movie, and good reaction.
You know a movie is good when there's lots of discussion and exchange of ideas and theories after the movie ends. Sometimes we want a clear narrative but sometimes we want a movie that makes our mind hurt trying to figure it out 😅😅😅😅😅
It's like a spiritual entry to "The Thing" universe. A shapeshifting alien that mutates/encompasses everything.
Annihilation is the definition of "not for everyone". But it was for me, and I've watched it several times to try and unravel its mysteries. Rare movie that, like The Exorcist or Sin City, features a unique collaboration between and author and filmmaker, and likewise produced a singular and special result
This movie is for wannabe film critics, so they can discuss what the movie means, even though it means nothing and is just a poorly written story.
@@TheNichq Yep, it's true! Anyone who enjoyed this film is a pretentious idiot, and only your opinion matters 😂
@@TheNichq oof. "I didn't get it and it wanted me to think critically so I dismissed it and called it 'poorly written'."
The protoform morphing into Lena reminded me of an A.I. model refining itself to match a source image.
The bear scene and lighthouse scene are both masterpieces
Masterpiece. Total masterpiece. It's almost up there with 2001.
its just bad metaphysics like the rest of scifi.
@@axeisthill5386 Then, please, go back to masturbating to fucking Marvel
@@axeisthill5386 Very insightful reply. Now go watch some Marvel shite.
While this isn't like, a scene for scene adaptation the way Dune feels for a lot of folks, I think it thematically still keeps the spirit of the first book, though that trilogy gets weirder and weirder as it goes on. Something that's irritated me is people getting upset about Natalie being cast in the role of what is an asian character in the books. But here's the thing, the first book goes out of its way to make sure there are no identifying features of any of the characters. Everyone is known by their profession/specialty. You don't find out the main character's background or even name until the second book. And when the movie was being made, the second and third books weren't out yet.
The Southern Reach series though feels more like a weird blend of Lost (the show) and Control (the game), but with its own aesthetic and story
Amazingly under rated movie. Great suspense building, music, characters, and i love Natalie Portman
I can’t recommend this to everyone, but this is one of my favorite sci-fi films in recent years.
Good reaction guys, i recommended you guys this movie like 5 years ago, finally the day has arrived lol. This movie was great bc it leaves you equally intrigued and disturbed and you keep thinking about it days (weeks?) after. Hope you guys check out more Cosmic Horror (Event Horizon, The Empty Man, The Color Out of Space) and Space Horror (Apollo 18, Life). Also the "No one will save you" movie that just came its so good, you'll enjoy it.
Oh to be a set designer on this movie would have been so fun! I loved the last interaction in the lighthouse with the mimic dance... it was like performance art. I think everyone or anything who enters the shimmer will mutate and become changed.. she isn't really herself anymore at the end but something new......Great reaction
@48:00 You're close! My own take on this moment of the movie is that a being capable of willing itself to self-destruct "teaches" an alien being, which does NOT know self-destruction, only self-duplication...like a tumor...Leena gives the alien a new knowledge it did not previously have. That's why it didn't "want" anything. It's a wild, wild meditation on our innermost natures, and not just us either, but life itself: why does it seem "programmed" within every biological lifeform to be capable of destroying itself?
THAT is why Ventress picked these team members: **they are all self-sabatoging people.** Kane decided to go on a suicide mission when he realized his wife was cheating on him. What are ways we, even the seemingly healthiest & sanest of us, slowly sabotage ourselves?
Meanwhile the alien is a being that does not seem to know what annihilation even is. But in turn, this makes life into a malignant force, neverending, always growing...so, does life *need* annihilation?
I don't think there's been a star-studded sci-fi movie as brilliant as this one since "Children of Men." And, I also (personally!) like this movie better than the novel it's adapted from.
This movie messed my brain up
b/c it's stupid. your brain was made for intelligibility and reality, not scifi bs from deranged modern ideologies.
I'm really glad you guys seemed to appreciate getting lost in this weird ass movie! it's low key one of my favourites just for having the balls to be SO strange and incomprehensible at times. my take on the movie is that the filmmaker wants us to bring ourselves to it and come to our own conclusions about it, not give us a bunch of heavy handed messaging or explaining, which is RARE in today's film ecosystem, and, for my over analytical lit nerd ass at least, appreciated and refreshing. it's kind of one of my favourites after all these years. I come back to it every now and then, it's just fascinating!
The film leaves you with a lot of questions, just like when you watch it for the first time, so I'll take the liberty of explaining the story and therefore the meaning of the end of the film to you
The film mainly deals with two themes of destruction or self-destruction and rebirth
At the beginning of the film you see the alien falling to earth and entering the lighthouse. Normally such an impact would end in devastating destruction, but this is not the case. The lighthouse is not damaged apart from the hole
A scene is then shown of Lina explaining to her students how a cancer cell works, how it divides and gradually does not destroy the body but rather reshapes and reprograms it. Taking all of this back to the beginning of the film explains to us that the alien is also like a cancer that has settled on the earth like a parasite to reshape the environment and that is exactly what happens in the film
In the shimmer nothing is destroyed, everything is just changed. Plants and animals are genetically manipulated in a similar way to how a cancer does to the body. Of course, cancer also results in death, but mainly it only changes and manipulates the cells and genes in the body
The shimmer thus creates a new world without destroying the old one. Possibly the alien was sent to earth not to destroy it but to create a new habitat
Now we come to another important theme in the film: self-destruction. The doctor explains in the film that everyone destroys themselves at some point in life and that also applies to the characters. Lina cheats on her husband, the doctor has cancer, Josie hurts herself on her arms with a knife and so on
Each of the characters has an urge to self-destruct, including Kain, because he knew that Lina was cheating on him and never told her and thus mentally self-destructed.
The shimmer, however, is the exact opposite of destruction; it creates something new, so the people in the film are a metaphor for antibodies that now go into the shimmer to find and destroy the cancer. In the end, the alien copies Lina in order to learn and create something new again. The lighthouse or the cave is a metaphor for birth, the cave is the birth canal and the alien is the egg cell. When Lina looks into the alien, the alien essentially gives birth to a new organism, it creates something new again and doesn't destroy anything
In the end, Lina finally learns that it can't be killed because the alien doesn't know how death works, the alien can only create and not destroy anything. However, Lian still manages to kill it by teaching the alien what people are very good at have it. In the end, the alien learns the meaning of self-destruction, but it is completely overwhelmed and accidentally kills itself. Lina completes the betrayal of Cain with her own self-destruction
The film explains that people repeatedly destroy themselves in life and often try to hide this or simply think it away instead of coming to terms with fate like the alien and creating something new and starting over like Lina and Kain at the end.
By the way, the reason why both Lina and Kain end up with this special eye color is because Kain is of course a clone, but Lina was in the shimmer for too long and, similar to Josie, her eyes were completely manipulated and she therefore also has part of the shimmer's DNA in her carries
And Ventress is the master behind luring Lena poisoning Kane's clone because she knows about her cheating on him and she needs someone who can fight and learn...underrated movie as hell..
The "Ship of Theseus" is also a thread to pull on
The book really blew my mind I didn't know someone could write like that, the film tried but I read Alex Garland got shafted and wasn't able to make the film he wanted to
Another good reaction here guys. One of my favorite cosmic horror films is one that I believe principally inspired this film. STALKER (1979) "A man works in an unnamed location as a "Stalker" leading people through the "Zone", an area in which the normal laws of physics do not apply and remnants of seemingly extraterrestrial activity lie undisturbed among its ruins. The Zone contains a place called the "Room", said to grant the wishes of anyone who steps inside. The area containing the Zone is shrouded in secrecy, sealed off by the government and surrounded by ominous hazards."
@56:10 I think you hit the nail on the head somewhat here. The story can't explain itself because it is an exploration of the unexplainable and inexplicable. And this theme a key part of a classic sci-fi novel called Roadside Picnic, which both the film and novel Annihilation are explicitly inspired by.
The premise or RP is incredibly similar to Annihilation, both the novel and the film. There is this area called the Zone which was created after an inexplicable visitation by some entity or force. It becomes full of inexplicable and dangerous phenomena that are beyond human comprehension and explanation. Thus it gets locked off by the governments of the world, and the only people who go in, besides scientists, are mercenaries called "stalkers" who illegally cross over for various missions usually involving taking or salvaging the various in unexplainable and inexplicable artefacts and phenomena from the Zone.
And yes, the novel was adapted into the highly regarded classic sci-fi film, Stalker.
But the reason why the novel is called Roadside Picnic is because of a conversation that happens in the middle of the novel where a character talks about how a human family might be driving in the country, and they stop for a picnic. They're only there for a couple of hours, but when they leave, they leave behind All of these artefacts of their presence and activity: empty wrappers, bottle caps, a newspaper, forgotten cutlery and so on.
And all of the creatures of that roadside, like the insects, the birds and the foxes, find these inexplicable and completely unknowable objects, and they are of course completely beyond any of these creatures comprehension. But if they were intelligent like humans, they might try to find meaning in these alien and inexplicable objects. They might imbue them with significance and purpose, but possibly their true meaning is banal and purposeless. There's no way to comprehend and know the incomprehensible.
And I think that the DNA of this novel is present in Annihilation.
This is the most confusing ending of a movie for me😂 But it's an enjoyable journey though, the bear is the most horrific creature ever!
She got "down on its level" so that she had a straight shot into the 'gator's mouth, the place where it is least armored and therefore most vulnerable to gunfire.
I remember watching this movie with my mom a few whiles back. She was really confused about the ending too but then somehow was able to come up with a theory of what it all meant by next morning.
Awesome film
In the book, if I remember correctly, they decided to try a female team because the other male or mixed team didn't work out. Like this entire swamp was an alien entity and sending women would be less of a threat and more of a communication channel for the alien entity.
i guess the film when the first guy could not remember anything is to give thoes going in the bubble was to give them pens and a note pad to write in detail of their experiences.
This is what cosmic horror is supposed to be. The alien is so alien that it’s completely beyond the capacity of our primitive ape brains to make sense of what they’re seeing. It warps our reality with it’s mere presence and all we can do is stare at it while our natural curiosity battles our fear of the unknown.
If Lovecraft was alive today to see this, he'll be proud to see people achieved to make a way to create otherworldly visuals he could only imagine through his writings.
The best explanation I've heard was from the writer and director Alex Garland! He said "This is an Adam and Eve story for an alien"! Of which I take that both Kane and Lena are something else carried out of the shimmer as being's able to exist as a cabon life-form on earth. Adaptation to exist without the shimmer and now set for the long annihilation of the human gene pool!
Remember the Asian girl with glasses in the classroom? She was the robot in "Ex-Machina" (His first film) and she's the lead in his HULU Series "Devs". I wonder if she was considered to be the lead in "Annihilation" but the studios wanted someone famous because Natalie Portman's character is Asian in the book
Instead she's the alien at the end too of this one. Sonoya Mizuno.
Sonoya Mizuno also was in _La La Land_ and _House of the Dragon_ as well.
this movie is beautiful and genius
everything else aside, I love how they portrayed this lifeform, which is evolution at its purest, life and growth just for the sake of it, only to die at the end
and how alien it is for us, while we are doing the exact same thing. consume and destroy to provide our own growth. we refuse to see our actions for what they are and we don't accept it when we see others do it
but I can't help but roll my eyes at the fact that the guy was unable to grasp the concept of feeling guilty after cheating, only feeling guilty at being caught. iconic xD
nature vs. nurture. Can they be separated? Did the shimmer offer to show what that would be like?
@White Noise Reacts,The guy that interviews Natalie's character was Wong from the
Dr.Strange films& the new Sorsorer Supreme,too?.
I’ve only seen this once the day it came out, after looking back into it, I know a few things such as Lena’s husband being ill, the big bubble, and the scene where that bear appears right at 36:05, it really horrified me just the way it looks and sounds like the woman’s voice.😬😅 Everything else I don’t remember any of it:)
I love this movie. My personal interpretation is that the movie is like The Shimmer. Its refracting our life in a way that is mutated and different. Its similar, but not quite the same, like the copying in the film. The visuals are both beautiful and terrifying, occasionally at the same time. Every good things has an equal bad, (The flower species being mixed into one plant mirrors the soldier whos body got mixed with the fungi.) But it also goes to show that life doesnt choose, it doesnt want anything, it just does. The deer in the forest are like an example of twins, copies of the same cell. We usually would say thats a beautiful thing, but when cells copy in a cancerous way, then it becomes terrible. I think the "thing" in the lighthouse was the embodiment of life itself. It had no form, no shape. Its indescribable. It just is. I also think a big reason why this movie is so impactful is because, im my interpretation is correct, its close enough to something we know that it can feel comfortable, but its different enough to seem alien and be scary.
P.s. the song choice at the end at the lighthouse id have to say was an AMAZING choice. It feels otherworldly but familiar enough to recognise it as "music" and not just sounds. For those wondering its "Interlude" by Moderat
14:00 - "So was she cheating with this guy?"
- "On Oscar Isaac!?"
I really get you girl...
The mirroring scene always terrifying
I literally JUST watched this again this morning and was hoping yall would watch it sometime and here we are lol
Lmao the "it's Florida out here" got me cause I'm from Florida and it's so freakin true. 😂 I'm so desensitized to alligators and snakes it's probably a serious problem. XD
I'm so happy y'all reacted to this no one ever does and it's one of my favorite cosmic horror movies!
I don't think it's a copy/original type situation. Lena's DNA was altered while she was in the Shimmer. Like Ventress said, if they wait too long then the person who reaches the Lighthouse won't be the person who first entered the Shimmer. It's the original physical entity that entered the Shimmer, but it is no longer Lena.
perfect, two days ago i thought i would like to see an "annihilation" reaction from you guys and girls. OBEY THE HYPNOTOAD!
I felt like the alien clone was trying to merge with the fire from the grenade and that's why it also spread to the crystal trees. The shimmer tries to combine elements from things within it, be they flora, fauna or fire.
This was great, excited for when Children Of Men... as depressing as that scenario is its one of my favourite films
One of the best cosmic horror sci fi movies I've ever watched
I know I'm 9 days late, but basically the movie's premise is "What would it would be like if the Earth had cancer?" That's why in various parts of the movie cancer is mentioned. Basically the way The shimmer behaves is the same way cancer cells behave.
Can someone get Stella a booster seat for those group shots? 😅