Yesterday, Meghan and I went to see Her. I was not impressed. I wasn’t emotionally compelled by the
story, except to feel pity for the main character. I was not invested in the
relationship (if you can call it that) between Theodore Twombly and Samantha,
his OS. I wasn’t at all aroused by the parade of pathetically empty humans
trying to connect (or sort of connect) sexually. My inner old man really took
over for this film experience. I laughed a few times, but mostly I just felt
uncomfortable. Intellectually, I understand the artistic merits of making the
audience feel uncomfortable, but, in this case, I did not enjoy my discomfort
on any level, aesthetically or otherwise. It was just discomfort, and an
overarching sense of mental watch checking. When is this going to be over? I do
not think we experienced an Aristotelian case of catharsis. This really wasn’t
a tragedy, anyway. However, I can thank the film for giving me the opportunity
to contemplate all of those freshman philosophy questions that have taken up
much of humanity’s mental energy since abstract thought became possible.
One of the major questions the film brings to mind is
reminiscent of Descartes Meditation.
What is consciousness? Descartes, famously, determined that we think, thus we
are. As Samantha, the AI OS thinks, develops, and, dare I say, evolves, she,
predictably, puts that conclusion to a stern test. IS Samantha? Does she be? She
seems to have the capacity for thinking, she makes apparently conscious
choices, and she ultimately displays what could be free will. So is she real in
the Cartesian sense?
Another major question the film demands the viewer to ask
harkens back to that granddaddy of old thinkers, Plato. What is love? It might
be that transcendent stairway that begins with physical attraction and proceeds
to the plane of the intellect; however, the film’s central relationship
complicates that concept by presenting an object of affection that is no real
object at all. Can one have physical attraction for a nonentity? Scenes from
the film might suggest that one can, but I am skeptical. Aristotle’s theories
of love are also thrown for a loop, as the film makes his equation of two
bodies and one spirit impossible to compute due to one missing body. (We will
not wrestle with the devil of an idea of the soul.) So, can one love a
(basically) inanimate object?
One of the more grounded scenes in the film occurs toward
the end, when Samantha and Theodore are going through a difficult stretch in
their relationship. During one of many
talks, Samantha pauses and sighs before a response to one of Theodore’s
questions. Theodore asks, “Why do you do that?” Samantha does not know what he
means. Theodore explains that she takes a breath sometimes before she responds.
“You don’t breathe,” he tells her. Yes, Theodore, and what does that tell you?
Samantha, in many respects, can be regarded as a rock that talks. She is a
brain in the purely mechanical sense, albeit a brain that can convince itself
that it can manifest feelings. She seems to be everything that a human being
is, without the body. So, is she human? No. Is she alive? No. Can she love? Ah.
That is a sticking point. After all, from Plato to Freud to Schopenhauer to Lou
Gramm: does anybody really know what love is?
As an intellectual pursuit, I think this film was at least interesting. As a film, it was not my favorite. I will say, as a final word, that whatever future this film was set in, I look forward to the daily fashion of flannel pants, small- or no-collared Oxford shirts, and Buck-style shoes. I couldn’t see myself loving an OS (even one as pleasantly-voiced as Scarlet Johansen), but I could see myself styling in those fashion forward high-waist slacks. I would prefer a belt, however.
As an intellectual pursuit, I think this film was at least interesting. As a film, it was not my favorite. I will say, as a final word, that whatever future this film was set in, I look forward to the daily fashion of flannel pants, small- or no-collared Oxford shirts, and Buck-style shoes. I couldn’t see myself loving an OS (even one as pleasantly-voiced as Scarlet Johansen), but I could see myself styling in those fashion forward high-waist slacks. I would prefer a belt, however.