Contact
(1997)
  - Information at Internet
    Movie Database
- Hollywood
    Jesus visual review
- 
  
  Looking Closer, review by Jeffrey Overstreet, "searching for truth, beauty 
  and meaning in the movies."
- 
  Cinema in Focus, a 
  social and spiritual commentary by Hal Conklin and Denny Wayman.
- 
  "Robert Zemeckis's 
  Contact as a Late-Twentieth Century Paradiso," Gregory M. 
  Sadlek, Journal of Religion and Film.
- "Anti-feminism
    in Recent Apocalyptic Film" by Joel W. Martin, Journal of
    Religion and Film, 2000.
- 
  Review, 
  Steve Lansingh, TheFilmForum: 
  Christian Conversation about the Movies.
- 
  Review, Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality & Health - 
  Spiritual Practices for Human Being.
- Themes
  
    - Alternate Reality
    
      - Ellie is called to
            experience an alternate reality (symbolized by her journey to the
            other world and by her love with Joss and with her father) which she
            cannot explain or prove.
 
- Apocalyptic
    
      - "...although we know earth is no longer
            central, the visual magic of this shot suggests our home planet is
            still very important. If for no other reason, this makes the shot
            supportive of human meaning making and anthropomorphic affirmation
            in the manner of classic apocalyptic." ("Anti-feminism
            in Recent Apocalyptic Film" by Joel W. Martin, Journal
            of Religion and Film, 2000.)
- See "Armageddon
            at the Millenial Dawn," Conrad Ostwalt, Journal of
            Religion and Film, 2000.
 
- Call
    
      - Ellie's call to study and then to
            experience the alternate reality.
 
- Entry into Jerusalem/Palm Sunday
    
      - Ellie is welcomed back from her "journey"
            as a hero, but then becomes the object of an interrogative power
            struggle to discover (and *own*) "what happened."
 
- Faith
    
      - raises serious
            issues about faith in the midst of science?s quest for knowledge.
            (submitted by Ellis I Washington, Columbus GA)
 
- Father Figure
    
      - Theodore Arroway as
            Ellie's father - also a mediator figure used to show her new worlds.
 
- Guilt
    
      - Ellie is sure that
            she killed her father because she didn't get him the right pills on
            time.
 
- Home
    
      - Ellie's journey returns her home -
            in all outward appearance she was never gone from there at all. Her
            experience of journey brings her into a fuller appreciation of the
            truths within her own home/heart.
 
- Journey
    
      - Ellie's journey
            takes her miles and hours from home, and yet she cannot prove that
            she has gone anywhere - from the outside it looks as if she has gone
            no where. Like Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz," her journey
            has been an inner journey about learning truths of love and
            faith. 
 
- Seeing/Not Seeing
      - The scene 
      where Dr. Arroway (Jodie Foster) is called to testify before the 
      congressional hearing reminds me of the scene where the Blind Man (well, 
      ex-Blind Man actually) is called to testify before the Pharisees. Whilst 
      there is an obvious difference in that the Blind Man could provide the 
      Pharisees with the sort of physical evidence that Dr. Arroway could not, 
      the interogators in both cases have made their minds up and are unwilling 
      to "see" the truth that is being presented to them.  The 'truth' is not 
      always visible to the naked eye. 
      (Andrew Fox, Russell Street Uniting Church, Toowoomba, AU)
- In the movie, she uses this 
      machine built by unknown alien plans. The 
      machine takes her on a journey that is very 
      powerful and real, the problem is that it 
      appears to the entire world that nothing happened. She is dismissed as 
      delusional, but it is as real to her as anything 
      she has ever experienced. Our walk with Christ 
      is the same. It has to be experienced. To those who have not experienced 
      it seems delusional, but for those who walk with 
      Christ it is real and true. (Steve 
      Richardson, First United Methodist Church of 
      Boyd)  
 
 
Index of Movie Titles
Index of Movie Themes