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Contact

1997 · Directed by Robert Zemeckis

🧘22

Woke Score

62

Critic

🍿78

Audience

Based

Critics rated this 40 points above its woke score. Among Based films, this critic score ranks #230 of 345.

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Synopsis

A radio astronomer receives the first extraterrestrial radio signal ever picked up on Earth. As the world powers scramble to decipher the message and decide upon a course of action, she must make some difficult decisions between her beliefs, the truth, and reality.

Consciousness Assessment

Robert Zemeckis' Contact stands as a curious artifact of 1990s prestige science fiction, a film that appears progressive on its surface but reveals itself, under scrutiny, to be fundamentally conventional in its social consciousness. Jodie Foster anchors the narrative as Dr. Ellie Arroway, a capable female scientist, yet the film treats this casting choice as mere casting rather than statement. She exists in a world of predominantly male military and government officials not because the film wishes to interrogate institutional sexism, but because that was simply what such institutions looked like to the filmmakers. The female lead is presented as exceptional, not as evidence of systemic change.

The film's engagement with faith versus science, its most thematically ambitious element, operates as philosophical inquiry rather than ideological positioning. Matthew McConaughey's priest character receives genuine intellectual respect, and the narrative refuses to position scientific rationalism as the sole arbiter of truth. This balance, while admirable, cannot be mistaken for progressive social consciousness. The film remains essentially apolitical about contemporary power structures, concerned instead with cosmic mysteries and personal spiritual journeys. Its skepticism toward government and military institutions, though present, reads as generic 1990s techno-thriller convention rather than systemic critique.

Contact ultimately succeeds as science fiction spectacle and fails as a vehicle for modern progressive sensibilities. It offers representation without commentary, philosophical debate without ideological commitment, and a female protagonist without feminist framework. For a 1997 film, this represents solid mainstream entertainment. For contemporary classification, it registers as thoroughly inert on the markers of cultural consciousness that define modern progressive filmmaking.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

62%from 23 reviews
ReelViews100

Contact is that rare big-budget motion picture that places ideas, characters, and plot above everything else.

James BerardinelliRead Full Review →
Los Angeles Times90

Contact is superior popular filmmaking, both polished and effective. But despite its success and its serious intentions, it's finally a movie where the storytelling makes more of an impact than the story.

Kenneth TuranRead Full Review →
Chicago Sun-Times88

Sagan's novel Contact provides the inspiration for Robert Zemeckis' new film, which tells the smartest and most absorbing story about extraterrestrial intelligence since "Close Encounters of the Third Kind."

Roger EbertRead Full Review →
Washington Post40

In some ways, Contact is just like the universe: big, star-bright and seemingly endless. Not to mention that it begins with a big bang, gradually falls into a lull and finally succumbs to entropy.

Rita KempleyRead Full Review →