Native (film)

Native is a 2016 British sci-fi film directed by Daniel Fitzsimmons, written by Fitzsimmons and Neil Atkinson and starring Rupert Graves and Ellie Kendrick.

Plot

Cane and Awan, and Eva and Seth, are two sets of mixed fraternal twins on an unnamed planet on which people are connected in "hive' minds via devices implanted in the backs of their necks, and on which the culture is highly logical and utilitarian. Due to their high degree of telepathic rapport, they are chosen for a colonization mission to Earth, after a space probe transmits Beethoven's Fifth -- which they recognize as evidence of intelligent life but whose purpose they don't clearly understand, as there apparently is no music for artistic purposes on their planet. Authorities choose Cane and Eva as the astronauts, and Awan and Seth as their contacts at Mission Control -- that is to say, each astronaut's sole means of communication with their home planet is contact with their twin. Authorities add that there is a live virus aboard ship as well.

Cane already is fascinated by the music, to an extent Eva already finds disturbing. After Awan becomes pregnant, only to die along with the fetuses she was carrying, Cane starts displaying behavior much like conventional human beings -- for instance, he starts trying to get to know Eva better personally, and he uses garbage and broken glass to make a pendant for himself and a drawing for Eva. Eventually, he becomes distraught enough to attempt suicide by hanging, though Eva saves his life. He also tries to initiate physical contact with Eva, despite her objections.

As the ship approaches Earth, Eva receives instructions from Mission Control, via Seth, to land in a body of water near a city, and to release a live virus to render the human race extinct to prepare for colonization by the home world. Cane uses a shard of broken glass to cut the telepathic receiver out of his neck, enters a room with what appear to be fetuses in artificial wombs but may be their "virus", and attempts to shut down the virus program before Eva knocks him out and places him in a stasis chamber.

Because the virus needs to be exposed to human DNA before the release, Eva goes out to extract some. She approaches a woman who fights her off before Eva fatally stabs the woman, then takes her DNA. Eva is distraught, despite Seth's continued pushing to continue the mission, and she wakes Cane and tells him what she did -- and he reminds her that she's planning to do the same thing to all other human beings. Eva and Cane return to the room with the fetuses, and Eva tries telling Cane and herself that human beings aren't as valuable as their people, for instance because there are no "hive minds" on Earth. Then Cane plays Beethoven's Fifth again, and Eva collapses, with telepathic pressure from Seth to continue. She asks Cane for help, and when he returns with a glass shard, she cuts the telepathic receiver out of her neck.

Cane and Eva agree to "contain the virus" on the ship and, as an alarm sounds, leave the ship, presumably for the last time. The movies ends when, cut off permanently from their home world and unable to speak the language where they are, they admit to each other how scared they are as they consider what to do next.

Cast

Reviews

Native holds a 43% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 7 reviews, with an average rating of 5.1/10.[1]

The film is described as "smart" and "elegant" by Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian.[2] Kim Newman in Empire magazine describes it as "ambitious, unusual and thought-provoking".[3] In The Times Ed Potton calls it a “script full of promise, with provocative things to say about empathy, obedience and individualism”.[4]

Production

Shot predominantly in Dagenham and Formby Beach in Liverpool in 2014, co-writer and co-producer Atkinson said in an interview with the Liverpool Echo: “Everyone at Formby beach was helpful. Dogwalkers gave us a wide berth but the problem was the tide – we had a ticking clock and finished filming with the water up to our director of photography’s knees.”[5]

Awards

The film won the feature film award at the 2016 Boston Science Fiction Film Festival. It was nominated for best film and director at the 2016 Bogotá Film Festival.

References


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