I found it interesting how many secular critics criticised this movie, and in one case, another Christian website was very condescending of this movies attempts to communicate a moral message.
One of my Korean students today, a little girl, - her face brightened at the mere mention of this film. I think it has a positive influence on the average person, and for reasons deeper than you might at first suppose.
I have not been very scientific in my analysis of this movie. Mine was far more touchy feely, and this, it seems to me, can sometimes be a more accurate way to assess whether a movie's heart is in the right place. It can also reflect one's bias.
Is it too late to mention that we are talking about movies here, not a book in the non fiction section, or someone on a soap box saying, Please Take Me Seriously.
Even so, I'm sure this is Bay's most serious attempt to be serious.
Like Steven Spielberg, I hope this movie is a sign that Michael Bay is growing up and seeing how meaningful his craft as movie maker can be. If so, we can no doubt anticipate some amazing stuff from him in the future.
I found the thoughts in the review below very useful. I do have one or two gripes though, for what it's worth. We are entitled to perceive movies any way we want. We go there to escape, so when we come back to the real world, do we have to argue about what we thought really happened? Maybe. Maybe not. It seems almost every reviewer I've read has made some mistake, and this just shows the extent to which it captures the imagination.
In my first draft of my review I got my dates wrong (I thought the movie was set in 2015).
I don't agree so much about the 'hooks in the flesh' comment of this review, or with the meaning the writer construes. I do think it's an interesting point, but I'm not sure whether Bay was making this just to entertain Evangelicals. I suppose they used hooks for minimal damage to the 'merchandise, and also to drive the point home that the clones are seen as meat, and the pain they endure is incidental. And the writer says the hooks defy the laws of physics. Really? Ever see a huge marlin (heavier than a man) get caught and towed in behind an almost invisible line?
Reviewed by: Michael Karounos
Beginning with The Matrix, recent science fiction movies as diverse as the Planet of the Apes, Equilibrium, and The Jacket all construct fascist societies in which there is a victim population that must be brought to awareness in order to be freed. The Island adheres to a similar mold, but it also departs from the pattern in that, unlike the latter three films, the oppressive ideology is a secular and not a Christian one.
Indeed, contrary to the criticisms of the movie by reviewers who condemn Bay for being so glib about violence, The Island spends the first hour constructing a complicated world in which clones are raised in a combination Club Med/prison facility. What they don't know is that they exist because some wealthy person—a model, an athlete, an X-sport daredevil—has paid five million dollars for an "insurance policy" that will provide them with the clone's limbs or organs in the event of disease, accident, or old age.
In the movie's term, the clones live to be "harvested." This is the term used in the current stem cell debate in which the crux of the issue is whether it is morally correct to grow and then use the parts of a living being who lacks consciousness in order to improve the life of one that has consciousness. The Princeton philosopher Peter Singer has famously argued for the infanticide of severely disabled babies and euthanasia for incapacitated adults, suggesting that the "personhood" of a human being may not be determinable for 90 days after birth (see ChristianAnswers articles mentioning Singer: Is the unborn human less than human?; Is it better for deformed or handicapped children never to be born?). Similarly, there are organizations arguing for the "personhood" of animals.
At the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, serious thought is already being given as to how personhood may someday be granted to computers. Christians should be alarmed that the ruling knowledge class in our culture is defining consciousness in ways that excludes several categories of people while simultaneously including categories of animals and machines.
These are deadly serious issues and as such frame the first hour of The Island as a serious film that stands apart from the second, explosion-filled hour. This review won't concern itself with the explosions, crashes, and various acts of mayhem, because they exist merely to justify a rating, to ensure a demographic, to promote the Bay brand. No preacher can preach to an empty auditorium, and Michael Bay, a graduate of Wesleyan University, is surely preaching. The question is, what is his message, and is it compatible with a Christian worldview?
A prominent media critic at Newsweek dislikes Bay's movies and writes: "The Island seems like a PSA by religious conservatives about the slippery slope of saving people from Parkinson's disease." Several critics, reflecting their cultural bias, have responded negatively to the seeming anti-abortion, anti-stem cell harvesting message of the movie. Clearly, the images support such an interpretation and constitute the film's clearest exposition of ideas: aborting life and harvesting life for selfish purposes is bad. For those resistant to accepting this interpretation of the film's rhetoric, Michael Bay himself makes clear the intent of the film in an interview with Dark Horizons:
Lots of sci-fi movies are much ado about nothing. What I liked about [The Island] is that it's a universal thing: we all want to live longer. But how selfish would you be to achieve that? You could get a liver, a heart, kidneys, essential things. But I wanted to show people going for things that were just so crass, like fresh skin for a face-lift. For some woman who doesn't want to go through the pain of childbirth and have stretch marks, why not have your clone birth for you? How disgusting is that? (http://www.darkhorizons.com/news05/island2.php)
Implicitly, Bay indicates that his science fiction movie is much ado about something. Really, it is about two things: the sanctity of human life on the one hand, and the inhuman, impersonal selfishness of certain types of human persons — models, athletes, and politicians. Furthermore, Bay cleverly indicts — by conspicuously leaving them out — the category of persons that most quickly comes to mind when discussing facelifts, liposuction, Botox, transplants, and collagen injections for puffy lips: the denizens of Hollywood.
The Island simultaneously supports traditional liberal and conservative values while critiquing the kind of post human society that wants to expand the choices of what is human even while tyrannically determining what humans are permitted to do. This is why Lincoln Six Echo (Ewan McGregor) at one point rebels and asks why they must eat certain foods and not others, why must they dress in white, why can't they make decisions for themselves? The reason is because they live in a totalitarian state in which all these decisions are made for them by a ruling knowledge class that knows best what is good for society and hence for them as individuals.
The movie's conflict is between a classic liberalism that is compatible with religious belief and a secular postmodernism that is not. Thus, Dr. Merrick (Sean Bean), the scientist in charge of the entire project, pronounces, "In two years I will be able to cure childhood leukemia. How many people can say that?" "Just you and God," responds Albert Laurent (Djimon Hounsou), the French mercenary.
Dr. Merrick promises the clones: "Nature has left you a garden of Eden to repopulate!" By doing so, he figures Nature as the film's god. In those two quotations, Bay illustrates the film's antithetical values between science and faith, between a secular worldview and a religious one. As Bean says of his character in an interview, "He's also got a Godlike factor in him, playing God."
The most striking exposition of religion in the film is accomplished through a visual contrast of captures. One of the methods in which the guards restrain violent "products" is to shoot miniature harpoons into them and then reel them down the hall. The premise of such a weapon is so ludicrous that it defies credibility: how do you drag the huge Michael Clarke Duncan across the floor, against his will, by means of hooks in his flesh? Clearly, the laws of physics would require the hooks to tear out. That this expedient is used on three separate occasions in the movie is both annoying and purposeful. As I remarked hopefully to my wife, "It has to mean something."
Indeed, not until another unbelievable sequence in the second hour can we understand the meaning of the fishhooks and reeling guns. When McGregor and Johansson fall from a skyscraper, they improbably plunge through the destructive wreckage and land safely onto a large net. The black construction worker (blacks are the only acceptable Christians in liberal myths) pulls them out and smilingly says to McGregor, "Jesus must love you." When he pulls out the lovely and busty Johansson he intones facetiously, "I know that Jesus loves you." The moment plays for a laugh that distracts attention from a key metaphor. What are the two ways to catch fish? With a hook or a net.
Secular science uses the hideous violence of a hook in the flesh of another human to fulfill what McCord (Steve Buscemi) proclaims is "the new American dream" — to "live forever." The promise of eternal life through Christianity is secured with the "net" of belief that "Jesus loves you" and doesn't require victimizing another human being.
Those contrasting elements are the clearest exposition of the film's worldview and argue strongly for a perspective on life that—if not actually Christian—is sympathetic to a Christian position.
But Bay is nothing if not ambitious in this movie and throws a dollop of social commentary on race into the thematic blender. In the beginning of the film I wondered whether "Lincoln" would be the liberator of the slave race. There is a liberation of slaves here, but the film, from a racial perspective, most clearly resembles I, Robot. In both films there is a type of "Magic Negro" character who liberates a "white" race that is enslaved by their cultural conditioning.
In The Island, all the clones wear white shirts, white pants, and white shoes and live in a "white" environment: controlled, programmed, sexless. The ruthless mercenary, Albert Laurent (Djimon Hounsou), undergoes an ideological conversion when he sees the brand on Jordan Two Delta's (Johansson's) wrist. He displays a brand on his own palm and in doing so references one of the signature images in Tim Burton's Planet of the Apes where humans, representing American slavery, were branded with a twisted cross to show the tyranny of Christianity. Bay undoes that liberal myth here because it is a secular tyranny that brands the clones, that uses them for parts, that says they are without souls (as humans were said to be without souls in Planet).
Laurent's mercenary heart is converted and he helps Jordan Two Delta by killing one of the guards. Based on that minor action, Bay idealizes the character and shows Jordan and Lincoln staring in close-up at Laurent as he heroically strides into the sunset in slow motion. It is an attempt at an epic moment, but it is so weakly supported by the action that one again suspects Bay of satirizing the moment and the mechanism instead of employing it.
The film concludes with one last metaphor, a reference to the film's first scene in which Lincoln dreamed of himself and Delta floating on the sea in a beautiful yacht called Renovatio. Dr. Merrick helpfully informs us that this is Latin for "rebirth." Lincoln and Delta and all the clones who escape the containment center and who were born only as "tissue" and "product" are reborn as persons. There is a lovely consonance of imagery as they escape in waves of white figures across the red earth. The desert is like a sea and each of the little figures floats across it like sail boats, finally free. Or, to use another metaphor from the movie, they are like the moth that Lincoln set free earlier: so many papillons fleeing with their arms outstretched from the prison island of the containment center.
The clones are transformed from so many products on a shelf into real people. The film implies that rebirth is not physical, nor merely intellectual, but consists of the one that is humanity's alone of all the species on earth: a spiritual one.
Ultimately, the meaning of The Island is that it is an isolated state of mind, one that exists artificially in an inhuman landscape of ideas and that denies personhood to human beings in the service of power, privilege, and wealth. I believe that Bay is arguing that such people, like those found among the beautiful celebrities of our time, think that life is expedient to their needs and are blind to the monstrous consequences of their selfish desire to live longer, more beautifully, more perfectly. It is they who live on an island.
Excepting the silly action sequences, which don't make much sense, The Island is a cleverly-executed film that attempts to answer an increasingly important question: what is a human life? Its answer is consonant with classic liberal and Christian thought and is the reason why Christians should see the film.
(Objectionable content: One "F" word, one "s" word, one "a" word, and a love scene with Johansson partly shown in a bra.)
See list of Relevant Issues — questions-and-answers.
Year of Release — 2005 / USA release: July 22, 2005 (nationwide)
Link:
http://www.christiananswers.net/spotlight/
movies/2005/theisland2005.html
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