Quantcast The Technician
College Media Network

The Technician

RSS

Moon: Movie Review

Benjamin Sussman

Issue date: 3/2/10 Section: Entertainment
  • Print
  • Email
The original Sam Bell is back on earth with his daughter Eve. His consent makes him equally culpable in the false promise and treatment of someone who is essentially himself, but in a separate physical body. How little respect must one show to another human being to at least acknowledge that as a human, they have certain rights? Evidently he has more than the company has, as they send a rescue crew, not to save the Sam Bell working on the Lunar Base, but rather to fix the damaged helium-3 harvester as this will affect their profits. Lunar Industries wants to rid themselves of the liability that something could compromise their business. The two Sams understand that if they are both found together, they will be killed. The first is already nearing the end of his engineered lifespan and is dying. That is another cruel and unusual punishment that Lunar Industries imposes on their employees: the standard procedure at the end of their contract involves incinerating the clone while telling them "Annyeonghikyeseyo," which is Korean for "good-bye," but only if the speaker is leaving and the listener is remaining put. It should therefore be more accurately construed as "you're not going anywhere." Sam elects to return to the damaged rover in order for the second Sam to have the chance to escape and live his life out on earth. In the end, Lunar Industries is exposed by the escaped clone of Sam Bell as having trapped, employed, and treated as slaves many cloned copies of himself.

This movie evokes the classic struggle for identity, particularly when Sam has to come to grips with the fact that he wasn't who he had believed himself to be. On top of this struggle for identity, we are faced with the question of the value of human life, and whether or not it would be proper to place our continual desire for more and more energy ahead of the rights of the individual. Also, are clones truly human, or are they just a genetic abnormality? I believe that because of the deception perpetrated by the company, they were mistreated horribly. The movie makes us think about any form of exploitation for the sake of profit, and how that could be reined in. Surely it would be nice if we were all heroes with courage and decency like Sam Bell. But what if we aren't?
< prev Page 2 of 2

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

J R

posted 4/15/10 @ 4:34 PM EST

Excellent movie, and I really enjoyed this review.

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Do you like common hour exams?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement

Site Features

Print PDF