8/25/2023 0 Comments Her spike jonze interview![]() How much of our day is spent taking in information, receiving and replying to communication. How much of our life is through our phones, our computers, through our texts, through our emails. "I think about the way that the phone I carry is now part of me. With such importance laid firmly on our gadgets, their access to the web and its seemingly infinite pool of knowledge, Jonze does believe that technology has the potential to burden us to the point of burn-out. In a near future, a lonely writer develops an unlikely relationship with an operating system designed to meet his every need. Whoever it was there was a whole support system and now we don't have it – now we have our iPhone." You used to live in villages with your elders that you could talk to, or priests who were much more important, or the witchdoctor. "That seems like something to think about, with finding ways to be kinder on ourselves, feel empathy for ourselves, help us deal with the situations that we put ourselves in. "I can't imagine that our psychology in that time has kept up with this pace," explains Jonze. Her has been Oscar nominated for Best Film and Screenplay With the growth of technology in the last decade, particularly our reliance on smartphones, it's clear that Jonze is sensitive to how technology is now key to all of our lives, for better or worse, but there is a worry that technology is outpacing the people that operate it. "And in the last 10 years things have gotten exponentially faster paced." We have been turned from hunters and gatherers into a cultural-based society and from that point on, from when we started agriculture, villages, building towns our lives have definitely got much faster paced," says Jonze. Infinitely relatable though gently different, the Los Angeles of Jonze’s unspecified future occupies a new and exciting place in cinematic history-and the history, as it where, of futurism. ![]() "The way I see it is that we have lived in civilisation for the last 10,000 years. TechRadar was lucky enough to sit down with Spike Jonze before the premiere of Her in the UK where he revealed that despite the plot's futuristic focus, the idea that the operating system in Her acts as a support network, is something that's steeped in history. "There used to be a whole support system and now we don't have it – now we have our iPhone." Everyone is talking but for the most part it's operating systems that are being chatted to. People, Theodore included, still sit at computers but everything is controlled by voice. Phones are spoken to through hidden earpieces, with the devices themselves looking more like delicate cigarette holders than ever-increasing rectangles. Interview Spike Jonze on Jackass, Scarlett Johansson's erotic voice and techno love John Patterson The director's offbeat love story Her about a man who falls in love with his computer. It's a wonderfully warm movie that presents a future that's only a beat or two away from the modern day a world that's awash with technology but the gadgets used are kept very discreet. ![]() Her's take on AI leans heavily on intelligence, while almost completely disregarding the artificial.
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