Aaron Marcus publishes an article on IX Interactions about the movie Her: I’ve heard the future of interaction
Recently, I watched, or rather, more specifically, heard, the movie Her, which features Joaquin Phoenix in the lead role of Theodore Twombly (now, there is an introvert’s name), a somewhat sensitive, somewhat appealing, caring, but almost terminally asocial techie writing handwritten personal letters for others in a cloyingly clean, modern, antiseptic office in a made-up future Los Angeles that mixes in urban scenes shot in the sci-fi downtown of Shanghai.
The other lead character is the memorable “operating system,” the on-the-spot, self-named Samantha, which Scarlett Johannson voices. She gives the primary virtual role all of her slightly squeaky, breathless, ever-so-seductive, quirky, almost always good-humored all to impersonating a machine-system impersonating a person. Who wouldn’t want to enjoy Scarlett Johansson speaking personally and directly to them?
Spike Jonze (born Adam Spiegel on October 22, 1969) directed the film. His work is much known in music videos and commercials, but he started his film-directing career with Being John Malkovich (1999). Jonze is famous for his music-video collaborations with Beastie Boys, Björk, and Fatboy Slim. He also was a co-creator and executive producer of MTV’s Jackass and is part owner of skateboard company.
Why the details? Well, I was struck dumb by this film in many ways, and it caused me to ponder its meaning. See more: http://interactions.acm.org/blog/view/ive-heard-the-future-of-interaction
Posted on 26 February 2014 in AM+A Blog, Articles, News | No Comments » You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.