In Dan Farah’s documentary “The Age of Disclosure,” which was one of the most talked-about premieres at SXSW this year, interviews with 34 individuals from various levels of government and military are used to argue that life exists beyond our planet, and that there is a vast conspiracy designed to keep us, civilians, in the dark about it.
In Robert Stone’s film Starman, which had less excitement surrounding its SXSW premiere, features a single interviewee who presents his belief that we are not alone in the universe. He uses this perspective to examine several decades of human advancement and emphasizes that despite other cosmic occurrences, we have just one Earth to call home.
I’m not really valorizing one philosophical mindset over the other, nor exactly stating a preference for one filmmaking approach or the other. I’m just noting that while The Age of Disclosure is much likelier to stir up controversy and win a bigger audience, the smaller, simpler, more personal Starman, which may only be aimed at a core group of space nerds, has stuck with me on some deep level.
Starman is the story of Gentry Lee, currently chief engineer for planetary exploration at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He’s 82 today and, like many people of his generation with an interest in math and engineering, he was inspired by President Kennedy to become part of the space race. Over his years with NASA, he has worked on the Viking and Galileo missions, played a key role in sending rovers to Mars and more. He also helped develop the landmark Cosmos television series with Carl Sagan and wrote multiple novels with Arthur C. Clarke.
Gentry Lee is a remarkable man who is also thoroughly unremarkable. He loves nature and baseball and might embody that hoary cliché about how if you love your job, you’ll never work a day in your life, because Gentry Lee loves his job.
Lee has been part of discoveries and leaps in technological progress that amaze him, but he’s also aware of the gap between what he and NASA and JPL have accomplished and what captures the public imagination. Part of his goal, in the series of wide-ranging interviews that make up the entirety of Starman, is attempting to restore the wonderment that existed in the ’60s and ’70s and may have waned amid expectations of full-scale missions to Mars or bunkers filled with alien spacecraft and humanoid extraterrestrials back on Earth.
As Lee puts it, referring to reactions to the images provided by Viking, “We did NOT prepare for ambiguity!”
That is the essence of Starman and the essence of Gentry Lee, and that’s why it’s a documentary that won’t be for everybody but will probably be subtly moving for some people. He’s excited about ambiguity! He’s excited about the questions he can’t necessarily answer after six decades in this industry. He’s giddy about a hypothetical alien life form enjoying “Johnny B. Goode,” a track on the so-called “Golden Record” that was sent off with Voyager in 1977. He’s thrilled by not having evidence of life elsewhere in the universe, because it means the possibility of finding that evidence still exists. You come away from this journey hoping that evidence is found during his lifetime, because that would probably excite him as well.
Stone’s approach is mostly just to follow Lee’s enthusiasm. The documentary doesn’t lack for archival footage and photography from the various missions Lee has been a part of. But Stone’s as likely to want to turn to footage of classic science fiction films to illustrate Lee’s points, genre touchstones like the Orson Welles broadcast of War of the Worlds, and films like 2001, The Day the Earth Stood Still, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Arrival. Because of his collaborations with Clarke, Lee is at the intersection of what happens when the cosmos provides inspiration — it can yield fantastical fictions or realities that would seem pretty fantastical to a time traveler from 1951, but too often leave modern observers cold.
Going back to Lee’s excitement, one thing he and the documentary truly want to do is offer a reminder that we shouldn’t let our excitement for where we’re going — some day, some of us, maybe — cause us to lose excitement for where we are. Talking about Elon Musk and Mars colonies and the like present one of the few things Lee is actually cautious about. “The idea that we can escape the problems that we create on this planet without understanding how we created them and go to someplace else and not make the same mistakes, in my opinion, is a logical fallacy,” Lee says.
Part of the poignancy of Lee’s story is the backdrop of his childhood in New York City, the lack of belonging that he originally corrected through his love of the Dodgers and then through the communities he’s found at work and — subsequently, if somewhat less discussed — through his family. He has found his happy place, and he doesn’t understand the instinct to leave it entirely. He worries about a lack of regard for where we are keeping us from ever getting to where we want to be.
It’s a thesis that’s hard to sensationalize and neither Stone nor Lee try to. Starman just wants you to briefly get caught up in considering it.
Read More
- Silver Rate Forecast
- Black Myth: Wukong minimum & recommended system requirements for PC
- Gold Rate Forecast
- USD CNY PREDICTION
- Former SNL Star Reveals Surprising Comeback After 24 Years
- Grimguard Tactics tier list – Ranking the main classes
- Arknights celebrates fifth anniversary in style with new limited-time event
- Gods & Demons codes (January 2025)
- Maiden Academy tier list
- PUBG Mobile heads back to Riyadh for EWC 2025
2025-03-17 23:28