Gattaca - A Experiencia Genetica [ Extended ]
★★★★★ (Essential Viewing) "They used to say that a child conceived in love has a greater chance of happiness. They don't say that anymore."
And in the final shot, we see Jerome Morrow—the perfect man who could not live up to his own perfection—put on his silver medal, crawl into the incinerator that has been his home, and activate the flame. He gives Vincent his final sample: his identity, his DNA, his ticket to space. And then he disappears. GATTACA - A EXPERIENCIA GENETICA
He has beaten the system. Not by being genetically superior, but by being willing to drown. ★★★★★ (Essential Viewing) "They used to say that
Gattaca asks: If we scrub the roulette wheel of birth clean of risk, do we also scrub it clean of art, of surprise, of the incalculable spark that makes a Vincent Freeman beat a Jerome Morrow? The Final Scene: No Handicaps In the film’s transcendent finale, Vincent finally boards the rocket to Titan. As the countdown ends, he turns to Irene and says, “They’re gonna send me up now. You want to know how I did it? This is how I did it, Irene: I never saved anything for the swim back.” And then he disappears
One man ascends to the heavens. Another descends into ash. Both are free. Gattaca - A Experiência Genética is not a film about the future. It is a film about the present that we are too distracted to see. It is a eulogy for imperfection, a love letter to stubbornness, and the most haunting argument against biological fascism ever committed to celluloid.
