Erik Brunetti by Tim Barber, Issue 12.

Online Features
Monday
Nov252013

Gattaca

WRITER Jason Jules

Released in 1997, Gattaca is an epic tale written and directed by Andrew Niccol. Like any great sci-fi narrative it takes aspects of the present-day and paints a future based on an extreme conclusion. Genetic engineering, social discrimination and state/corporate control brings us to a time and place where in-valids are people born naturally and valids are those perfected by genetic enhancement. Here DNA determines social status. Valids are the superior of the two; they are less vulnerable to disease, have longer life expectancy, a higher IQ – you name it. Inevitably, in-valids, the runts in society’s litter, are a ready-made service class despite a law against such discrimination. The story follows Vincent (Ethan Hawke) who, although being born in-valid, has hopes of joining the best of the DNA elite as an astronaut. In order to do so he assumes the identity of a valid, Jerome (Jude Law) – a former swimmer, paralysed from the waist down after a car accident. Vincent adopts Jerome’s identity and goes through a strict daily regime to conceal his own. It’s with Jerome’s DNA profile that Vincent gains admission to Gattaca, the aerospace corporation he hopes will allow him to go on a manned spaceflight. Against a stylish modernist backdrop the story unfolds. The love interest is Irene – an in-valid who Vincent meets at the corporation, played by Uma Thurman. The plot twists are many, and the film’s narrative tension is amped up by a murder investigation which takes place in Gattaca and threatens the discovery of Vincent’s true identity. But it’s the intricate exploration of themes such as individual destiny, the nature/nurture debate, genetic engineering and social discrimination that really trigger the imagination. The drama is also made all the more compelling by Michael Nyman’s ever-present soundtrack and the Oscar-nominated set design and art direction.

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