Gattaca ” They don’t care where you were born, just how ” The film Gattaca, by Andrew Niccol presents a story centered on the future prospects of genetic engineering and its controversial affects on human society. The film depicts a future, in which wealthy families can create perfected children, a factor that has divided Gattaca’s society into different classes based on genetic traits. Andrew Niccol, who wrote and directed Gattaca, was aiming to break in to the movie world. It follows the life story of Vincent Freeman and his ambition to become a Navigator astronaut at Gattaca, the Space Corporation. Vincent Freeman was a love child (conceived naturally) in a world that was founded on genetic engineering. Vincent’s bother, Anton, unlike himself was genetically modified and Anton was favoured oven Vincent because to Vincent’s father, Antonio, Anton was the perfect son, as Vincent had physical defects, such as needing to wear glasses, and having a heart disease that would cut his life span shorter.
His father didn’t think Vincent was worthy of the name Anton because he had too many defects. Though out Vincent and Anton’s life Vincent was always treated unfairly, like when his parents tried to enrol him in kindergarten they wouldn’t accept him because they couldn’t insure him and they wouldn’t take the chance on his weakness. When Anton discovers that Vincent’s wants to be an astronaut he would always rub it in that he could be one if he wanted. Vincent never got any support from his father either, he was discouraged from the very start and his father used to say things like. “The only time you ” ll see the inside of a spaceship is if you were cleaning it”.
The Essay on My Father’s Life by Raymond Carver
The last paragraph of this essay is my favorite by far, “…in their beautiful voices out of my childhood. Raymond. ” The author of this story made it so tangible the dislike Raymond Jr. had for his birth name that it felt like a true revelation when the character finally embraced it. To hear his father’s name echo as his own name and to enjoy it leaves the reader with the same sense of happiness. ...