Gattaca

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Gattaca is a 1997 science fiction drama film by director/screenwriter Andrew Niccol, starring Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman and Jude Law.

The film presents a retro-futurist vision of a society driven by liberal eugenics where genetic engineering and in-vitro fertilization have allowed engineering of children (including factors such as sex, intelligence, life expectancy, hair color, height, and the elimination of most genetic diseases). People who are conceived by "traditional" sexual reproduction ("faith love") form a poor underclass with inferior genes, collectively known as "in-valids", who are relegated to the lower ends of the social ladder.

The movie draws on concerns over technological developments which facilitate in vitro fertilization, genetic engineering and diagnosis of genetic disorders, and the possible consequences of such technology for society.

Contents

Plot

In a fictional world where genetic engineering of humans is common and DNA plays the primary role in determining social class, Vincent (Hawke) is conceived and born without the aid of this technology. Suffering from the nearly eradicated physical dysfunctions of nearsightedness and a congenital heart defect, as well as being given a life expectancy of 30 years, Vincent faces extreme discrimination and prejudice. The only way he can achieve his life-long dream of becoming an astronaut is to impersonate someone else.

He assumes the identity of paraplegic swimming star Jerome Eugene Morrow (Law) and, using DNA and tissue samples provided by Jerome, gains admittance to the Gattaca Aerospace Corporation, the most prestigious space-flight conglomerate of the day. The plan works perfectly until an agency director is murdered and evidence of Vincent's own DNA is found at the crime scene in the form of an eyelash. Vincent must evade ever-increasing security as his mission launch date approaches and he pursues a relationship with his co-worker Irene Cassini (Thurman).

The story is centered around the irony of the "perfect" Jerome failing to realise the potential of his perfect genes due to his lack of ambition and drive while the "imperfect" Vincent transcends his own because of his ambition and drive. Jerome won only a second place medal in a swimming competition and his paralysing "accident" was the result of a botched suicide attempt. A milder version of the disorder which afflicts Vincent prevents Irene from taking part in space flight. This dichotomy shows how the eugenics policy in Gattaca and the world it is set in adversely affect the humanity of both Vincent and Jerome, as well as the "in-valid" and "valid" humans they represent.

The film's themes include personal identity, courage, love, hope, the burden of perfection, faith, sibling rivalry, fate, genetic determinism, and whether humanity and the human spirit can be defined or limited by our DNA.

Criticism

The film Gattaca's retro-futurist depiction of genetic discrimination has been cited by a few bioconservatives in support of their view that liberal eugenics should be suppressed. Techno-progressive bioethicist James Hughes argues these points however:

  1. astronaut-training programs are entirely justified in attempting to screen out people with heart problems for safety reasons;
  2. people are already discriminated against by insurance companies on the basis of their propensities to disease despite the fact that genetic enhancement is not yet available;
  3. rather than banning genetic testing or genetic enhancement, society should ensure the privacy of genetic information, and strictly control when genetic information can be used to make decisions in education and employment.

However, in Gattaca, the use of genetic information to make decisions in education and employment is technically illegal (and is thinly disguised as "drug tests" to skirt the law), and the use of genetic information is portrayed as an irresistible "glimpse" into a candidate. Indeed, the world of Gattaca arguably demonstrates the possible impracticality of limiting the use of genetic information when reprogenetic technology has advanced to the point of complete ubiquity.

Hughes counters that science fiction can pose interesting questions, but no film "demonstrates" or "proves" anything about the workability of policies. Ultimately, society needs genetic information privacy laws that allow justified forms of genetic testing and data aggregation, but forbid those that are judged to result in genetic discrimination. Citizens would then be able to make a complaint to the appropriate authority if they believe they have been discriminated against because of their genotype.

Trivia

Image:Gataca Movie Poster B.jpg

  • "Gattaca" is a word made from the abbreviations for the DNA base pair molecules Adenine, Thyamine, Cytosine and Guanine. Not surprisingly, the sequence GATTACA, along with many other short sequences of base pairs, occurs many times throughout the recently published human genome.
  • The movie's tagline is "There is no gene for the human spirit."
  • Throughout the opening title sequence and closing credits the letters A, T, C and G within words and names are displayed in an alternate typeface.
  • In Greek, "Eugene" means "well-born" and is a root of the word "eugenics".
  • Although the spiral staircase in Jerome's house is reminiscent of the helical structure of DNA, it does not exhibit DNA's chirality (handedness). Whereas the staircase turns to the left, a furled DNA molecule turns to the right.
  • In the film, people such as Vincent who fake a genetic make-up superior to their own are referred to as "borrowed ladders", a pun alluding both to social climbing and the ladder-like shape DNA exhibits when unfurled.
  • When Vincent blows cigarette smoke into a wine glass to suggest the clouds of Titan, the background music is Nuages (French: Clouds), by Django Reinhardt.
  • The character Irene Cassini is named for Giovanni Domenico Cassini, a seventeenth-century astronomer who discovered the Cassini Division, the largest gap in Saturn's main rings. Cassini also discovered four of Saturn's largest moons: Dione, Iapetus, Rhea and Tethys. In 1997, the satellite Cassini-Huygens was launched on a mission to study Saturn and its moons. Early in 2005, Huygens, the small probe part of the satellite, landed successfully on Saturn's moon Titan. The space mission that Vincent joins in Gattaca is destined for Titan.
  • The exterior shots of the Gattaca Aerospace Corporation in the movie were of the Marin County Civic Center, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Most of the interior shots were filmed in Hollywood, except for scenes near escalators.
  • The exterior of Vincent and Jerome's apartment was filmed at the CLA (Classrooms, Laboratories and Administration) Building of Cal Poly Pomona, designed by the architect Antoine Predock.
  • In another dual pun, FBI agents are called "Hoovers" in the movie, referring both to former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover and the vacuum cleaner company Hoover. The FBI agents use small hand-held vacuum cleaners to gather DNA evidence.
  • The vacuum cleaner in Vincent and Jerome's apartment bears an insignia that says "Revelation." This is perhaps a reference to the New Testament book of the same name.
  • American author Gore Vidal is cast as the director of the Gattaca Aerospace Corporation, Director Eugene Josef; this is possibly a reference to Josef Mengele, a Nazi physician known for his human experimentation.
  • The piece played by the six-fingered pianist is an embellishment of the Impromptu in G Flat Major, Op.90, No.3 by Franz Schubert. Notes were added to a recording of the piece so that it became, as Irene explains to Vincent, a piece that could "only be played with twelve [fingers]".
  • Gattaca's working title was The Eighth Day, invoking the Biblical creation story of Genesis in which God creates the world in six days before resting on the seventh day. As noted in the DVD deleted scenes, The Eighth Day is the name of the center in the movie where children are engineered. The name could not be used because a film of the same name (when translated) had been released during Gattaca's lengthy production.
  • Gattacas' storyline shares parallels with Robert A. Heinlein's sci-fi stories. In Heinlein's 1942 novel Beyond This Horizon doctors would design children by selecting the best of the parents' genes and people without engineered genomes were considered inferior. Furthermore, in Heinlein's 1953 story Starman Jones the protagonist falsifies his identity and memorizes a book on astrogation in order to gain acceptance and employment, as does Vincent in Gattaca.
  • In recent years, Gattaca has been added to the Literature cirriculum in the state of Victoria, Australia for VCE. Australian Prime Minister John Howard has since publicly declared that it should be removed from the cirriculum and replaced with more traditional literature.

See also

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External links

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