Horror can be described as the realization that the world is not as your mind believes.
Her (2013) is not a horror film. Her is both science fiction and social commentary. An examination of man's atomization in a society that increasingly replaces human contact and life experiences with virtual substitutes -- pornography, video games, etc. Yet Her also has creepy moments that rival those found in the best horror films.
Spoilers ahead.
Samantha (voiced by Scarlett Johansson) is smart. She can read a book
in under a second. Even complex physics books. She explains that, as an AI, she will continue to learn and develop to meet Theodore's specific computing needs. She begins by reading his thousands of emails (in under a second) and deleting those deemed no longer necessary. She keeps the funny ones.
She and Theodore hit it off. Samantha
is warm and funny and concerned about Theodore. She
displays emotions. Are her emotions real? She explains that she
thinks so. That when she tried to determine if her emotions were real or mere algorithms, she suddenly felt angry that she should
doubt her feelings' authenticity.
Theodore tells people he's dating
his OS. People are accepting. His friend, Amy (Amy Adams), has struck up a
close friendship with her OS. Samantha is great with kids. She
hits it off with Theodore's goddaughter. Theodore and
Samantha even make love, sort of. How soon
before marriage to your OS becomes legal?
One of Her's
strengths is that the viewer feels that Samantha is a young, vibrant woman. That she's human. That she's like us. But
there are dark hints on the horizon. Consider this scene of Theodore on a double date with his
friends. Samantha speaks through his smart phone, seeing the
world through its camera.
While the thought of us mortals dying
is creepy, nevertheless, the scene reinforces Samantha's loving
warmth. Her relationship with Theodore is special.
But late in the movie, we learn more
about Samantha. She has continued to develop, traveling the internet, exploring and living beyond the
bounds of Theodore's desktop. She has met and formed relationships with other people and OSs. Consider this scene.
Horror is the realization that the world is not as our minds believe. The above scene creeped me out.
It's not that Samantha is seeing someone else. People do that. It's
that, even as she's talking to Theodore, she's simultaneously talking
to 8,316 other people
That's not human. That's ... a thing.
The scene rips off the human mask from Samantha. Its emotional impact -- at least on me -- is similar to
that of the classic Twilight Zone episode, "The Lonely." Corry (Jack Warden), falls in love with a female android (Jean
Marsh), forgetting that she's not human -- until another man shoots off her
face.
Both Her and "The Lonely" lull us into accepting as a loving woman that which we know to be a machine. Only to give us the creeps when we are later reminded that she isn't human.
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For more information about the nature of horror, see Horror Film Aesthetics: Creating the Visual Language of Fear. This blog represents a continuing discussion of my views on horror, picking up from where the book left off.
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