QuickTidal, on 14 November 2016 - 05:56 PM, said:
I have the same lingering questions as you...the child question for Louise was (unless I misunderstand it) that she feels she HAS to have Hannah, so that the heptapod portion of her life can occur and the world can exist and not go to war...similar to that LOST ep The Constant. You need the beginning (heptapod language study at the ship), and the end (Hannah's life) to make up the whole (time foreseeing) equation. I also think that Louise was willing to have the child simply because she was going to give her a good life even knowing where that short life ends up. My question: Is there a part of Louise that WONDERS if Hannah's illness can be averted now that she can use the heptapod language for foreseeing? I wondered at that. I THINK that's the implication with time not being linear for her any longer...but I'm not sure. Not that Hannah won't die for sure...but that there is a possibility it won't occur how it did in her visions...which might be enough for her to feel safe in going ahead with the pregnancy.
I think the tech level isn't ever going to be high enough in Louise's/Hannah's lifetime to fix the very rare genetic disease. And perhaps any child conceived between Ian and Louise would have it - and so having that time and love, even though it's going to end in heartbreak, is still the right move for Louise. That's such an emotionally fraught and complex thing. I love that the movie was willing to go there (haven't read the short story it's based on... yet).
Quote
I LOVE the conversation with Costello about the "in 3000 years humanity will help us", and how for that to happen the heptapods have to bequeath them with this foresight gift. I believe it DOES posit a more peaceful future. Because with people becoming unstuck from time, it would be hard to lie ..and would be easier to avoid potential issues?
I'm curious what it is the heptapods might need help with, but I'm fond of the idea that humanity has advanced enough by that point to do so.
I THINK it's also implied in one of her visions that Louise teaches the heptapod language to her students, so hopefully that means it's not just the purview of the elite, but that every can partake. This includes, her book....provided it's written in layman's terms.
The issue I saw with this is that if I envision a future in which I'm successfully able to hide the lie from you and you successfully envision a future where you discover the truth... who wins between you and I? Does this become an issue of collective belief regarding the future? Also the issue of propagating change from the worst futures to the better past to divert the stream of time runs into issues of "Who is doing the changing?" and "Which ones become effective in a cacophony?" Fascinating stuff.
The question of what the heptapods need help with is a very cool open ended one. I'd be very interested to see which route any follow-up stories take with it.
Quote
Also I love that there are little throwaway lines in the dialogue that are never explained, and if you miss them they might mean little...but when you dig they mean SO much. Like when the Russians heptapods told them "There is no time" and they took that to mean that an attack was imminent...meanwhile it was just the heptapods telling them that they have no concept of time. Just brilliant.
Yah. I also really want to know what the Mandarin lines were said in regards to General Shang. They were purposely left untranslated onscreen and I'm going to look and see if anyone has translated it yet. I know the "important line" is "In war, there are no winners - only widows." But I want to know the entire conversation and how Louise managed to get Shang to stay on the line long enough to listen to that.
The choice of "Abbott" and "Costello" for names is so inspired because of the famous "Who's on First" comedy bit the original comedians did. I recently saw a video of them doing it at the Cooperstown Baseball Hall of Fame and it was easily the best thing in that museum (I don't actually recommend going there unless you really fuckin' love baseball, which I don't).
Also, I don't think Abbott was tapping the wall to let them know about the bomb. The bomb was less important than getting Louise to touch the wall and thus be in contact with the symbols/knowledge that were there for the big data dump. I think that's a small reason why Louise tapped into the Heptapod Written Language so fast - she physically touched the walls, whereas the other linguists elsewhere may have not done so.