Spike Jonze’s new film Her takes place sometime in the future
and we find Theodore Twombly (Joaquin Phoenix) living in a world where
technology has finally taken precedent over human interaction. A whole where people
spend more time talking to their computers than they do to each other. Of
course this has already happened for some.
Indeed Theodore’s job is to write personal letters for people
because presumably they are no longer capable of doing so themselves. Theodore
is a bit of a sad case who is going through a divorce because somehow he has
managed to let the gorgeous Catherine (Rooney Mara) slip through his fingers. He
does manage to get himself a hot date but then turns down the girl’s sexual advances.
Now he fills his time playing computer games (pretty cool ones) and not much
else.
Eventually he finds solace in someone who understands him, cares
about him, flatters him and is much more considerate than real people are. It’s
also got a sexy voice and names itself Samantha. This is his new OS. Now we all
know that computers can take over your life but this is probably especially true
if they sound like Scarlett Johansson.
Anyhow Theodore and sultry Samantha ‘fall in love’ in a
world where a guy having virtual sex with his OS is absolutely normal. In fact,
even when they double date with another real couple no one bats an eyelid.
This I guess is the film’s take on modern society but the problem
is rather than being a ‘yeah this is the one’ sort of relationship it turned
out to be like any other typical bland romance that any sane person would want
no part of. Their conversations together really are banal.
More interesting for me was the interaction between Theodore
and his neighbour/friend-without-benefits Amy (Amy Adams) who is married to
another. Will Theodore cheat on his OS behind her back? Sadly Theodore isn’t
that exciting.
Of course, we all also know that sometimes computers can let
you down. One day Theodore learns just how well his OS can multitask when he
finds out that Samantha can have virtual sex with hundreds of smart phone users
simultaneously. Then she dumps him! In fact she dumps everyone.
I’m not sure if we’re supposed to be sad when this happens
but I just thought, right then, it’s Amy time and that’s how the film ends.
Sort of. We don’t really know. Do they jump off that building together or do
they jump each other. Hopefully the latter, even in this futurist world surely
the Billy Crystal rule that men and women can’t be friends still applies.
The film has some nice ideas but the overall premise is a bit
thin and gets stretched thinner throughout the two hours, meaning there are quite
a lot of dead patches in the film.
Generally though I liked it and the technology shown was all
well founded, which is a rarity in a film. Everything that the portrayed is worryingly
possible...
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