Love (2011 film)
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{tone|date=June 2019}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Love
| image = Angels & Airwaves - Love film poster.jpg
| alt = Love 2011 poster
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = William Eubank
| producer = {{unbulleted list|Angels & Airwaves|Mark Eaton|Daniel Figur|Vertel Scott|Nate Kolbeck}}
| writer = William Eubank
| starring = Gunner Wright
| music = Angels & Airwaves
| cinematography = William Eubank
| editing = {{unbulleted list|Brian Berdan|Scott Chestnut}}
| studio = {{unbulleted list|New Dog Media|Griffin Interplanetary Studios}}
| distributor = National CineMedia {{small|(United States)}}
| released = {{Film date|2011|2|2|SBIFF|2011|8|10|United States}}
| runtime = 84 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| gross = $1.5 million
}}
Love is a 2011 American science fiction drama film produced and scored by the alternative rock band Angels & Airwaves. The film is the directorial debut of filmmaker William Eubank. The film's world premiere took place on February 2, 2011, at the 26th Annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival and the film was later featured in the Seattle International Film Festival, FanTasia 2011, and a number of other festivals. The film was screened in 460 theatres across the United States on August 10, 2011, in the Love Live event.{{cite web |url=http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/07/15/angels-and-airwaves-love-live-event/ |title=MTV News | EXCLUSIVE: Angels & Airwaves Present 3-For-1 Live Music And Film Experience |publisher=moviesblog.mtv.com |date=July 15, 2011 |access-date=2011-07-19 |archive-date=2011-07-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718221643/http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/07/15/angels-and-airwaves-love-live-event/ |url-status=dead }}
Love portrays the personal-psychological effects of isolation and loneliness when an astronaut becomes stranded in space and through this, emphasizes the importance of human connection and love. Additionally, it touches on the fragility of humanity's existence (explored through a dying Earth-apocalyptic doomsday scenario) inspired by the cautions of Carl Sagan in Pale Blue Dot and considers the importance of memories and stories as humanity's legacy.{{cite interview |last=Eubank |first=William |subject-link=William Eubank |interviewer=SBIFF |title=Director Q&A |location=Santa Barbara, California |date=2011-02-03 |work=Santa Barbara International Film Festival}}
Plot
During an 1864 battle of the American Civil War, a lone Union soldier, Captain Lee Briggs (Bradley Horne), is dispatched on a mission to investigate a mysterious object reported to Union forces. He leaves to venture on the mission.
Fast forward to 2039, United States Astronaut Lee Miller (Gunner Wright) is dispatched to the International Space Station (ISS) as a one-man skeleton crew to determine its safety and make any required adjustments, after it had been left unattended for two decades due to unspecified reasons. Shortly after his arrival, significant disturbances transpire on Earth, eventually leading Miller to lose contact with CAPCOM and finding himself stranded in orbit alone, forced to helplessly watch events on Earth from portholes 200 miles above his home planet. Miller struggles to maintain his sanity while in isolation by interacting with Polaroid pictures of former ISS crew members left aboard the ship.
Experiencing power issues, Miller moves into an unpressurised module of the space station to perform repairs and discovers the 1864 journal of Briggs. Miller reads Briggs's account of the war and becomes enthralled by the mysterious object he is searching for, not realizing he will soon become more familiar with the very same object, and not by accident.
By 2045, after six years without CAPCOM contact and a deteriorating oxygen system in the ISS, Miller puts on a space suit and goes for a spacewalk, deciding that it would be easier for him to detach his tether and slowly drift towards Earth and to burn in the atmosphere than slowly suffocate to death on board the ISS. He finds, however, that he is unable to go through with his suicide.
Miller is seen still aboard the ISS, presumably much later: his hair has grown extremely long, and he is extensively tattooed. He has drawn sketches of people and battles of the Civil War from the journal all over the interior of the ISS. The cramped quarters of the space station have become a rat's nest symbolic of his diminished sanity. He then seems to be contacted from outside the ISS, and to receive instructions to dock and transfer over. He does so, and seems to arrive in a giant uninhabited structure of distinctly human making. It is unclear whether this is real or imagined by Miller, who is now insane.
Miller wanders around until he happens upon a server mainframe where he finds a book titled A Love Story' As Told by 'You. Inside this book, he finds pictures of Captain Lee Briggs with his discovery, a gigantic cube-like alien object that may have helped advance human society. In the index of the book, Miller finds a reference to himself and types it into the computer prompt. He then finds himself inside a generic hotel room, where a disembodied voice says:
{{blockquote|How are you doing, Lee? Sorry about this projection, but it's the only way we could reach you. We can't tell you how relieved we are to have you here. Now, before we get ahead of ourselves, we have to tell you something. You're the last one, it's all gone. We understand how you might feel. Connection is perhaps the most cherished thing any being can have. That's the thing. That's why we've been listening. The place you see here is a scrapbook of sorts, a collection of memories and mementos of mankind's brief existence. It's a good thing we found you. We look forward to meeting you, Lee.}}
During the speech, we see the same cube-like object in space in the year 2045. The viewer is left to assume that this object has 'obtained' Lee Miller and is speaking directly to him. The film ends with the voice of a computer speaking of human connections and love.
Production
File:Eubank-Love-2011-Figur-ISS-Set-Ext-1.jpg|The ISS set built in a driveway, seen protected from the rain by plastic tarps
File:Eubank-Love-2011-Figur-ISS-3.jpg|Interior of the space station set
File:Eubank-Love-2011-Figur-Gunner-Wright-modified.jpg|Gunner Wright in the film Love
The space station set was built in William Eubank's parents' backyard.{{cite web |author=Russ Fischer |date=January 17, 2011 |title='Love' Trailer Channels '2001', 'Moon' and 'Solaris' Into a Promising New Concoction |url=https://www.slashfilm.com/angels-airwaves-love-trailer/ |publisher=Slashfilm.com |accessdate=2011-01-17 |archive-date=2021-06-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210620105151/https://www.slashfilm.com/angels-airwaves-love-trailer/ |url-status=live }} In a making-of video uploaded to his Vimeo account, Eubank details the construction of the set and lists materials such as packing quilts, MDF, pizza bags, Velcro, insulation, Christmas lights, and other salvaged material as components to the ISS set.{{cite video |url=http://vimeo.com/18634751 |title=Behind the Scenes |access-date=2011-01-18}} According to Tom DeLonge, the production was going to rent the space station from another movie but instead opted to construct it from salvaged materials for budget reasons.{{cite web |url=http://www.rocksound.tv/features/article/tom-delonge-q-a |title=RockSound.tv | Tom Delonge Q + A |publisher=RockSound.tv |date=January 24, 2011 |accessdate=2011-02-04 |archive-date=2011-01-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110130115623/http://www.rocksound.tv/features/article/tom-delonge-q-a |url-status=dead }}
Release
=Festival circuit=
{{quote box |quote=I can tell you, honestly, the movie is ten times better than I thought it would be. But it's not meant to compete with Transformers. This is an art-house film and no band has really done this in a very long time. So we're hoping that we catch some people off guard and we're also hoping that we do something that is very credible as far its artistic acumen goes.{{cite web |url=http://www.thepunksite.com/interviews.php?page=angelsandairwaves |title=Angels & Airwaves Interview – Tom DeLonge and David Kennedy |publisher=ThePunksite.com |date=April 11, 2010 |accessdate=2010-03-21 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100426022222/http://www.thepunksite.com/interviews.php?page=angelsandairwaves |archivedate=April 26, 2010 }} |source= —Tom DeLonge, April 11, 2010|align=right|width=25em}}
The film's world premiere took place on February 2, 2011, at the 26th Annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival, with additional screenings on February 3, 4 and 5 at the Metro 4 and Arlington Theater. The film was screened for free on February 11 at the Riviera Theatre in Santa Barbara as one of eleven films chosen as "Best of the Fest".
The 2011 Seattle International Film Festival featured Love in both their Sci-Fi and Beyond Pathway and their New American Cinema program. The film played on May 21 at the Pacific Place Theatre and May 22 at the SIFF Cinema. The film played a third time, June 11, at the Egyptian Theatre.
Love was accepted into the 2011 Fantasia International Film Festival held in Montreal, Quebec. Its FanTasia screening on July 18 in Hall Theatre, as part of the festival's Camera Lucida Section, marked the film's international premiere. The film also screened in Athens, Lund, London, Nantes, South Korea, Spain, Israel, and elsewhere.
class="wikitable" |
|Date
! |Festival ! |Location ! |Awards ! |Link |
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| align="center"| Feb 2–5, Feb 11 | align="left"| Santa Barbara International Film Festival | Santa Barbara, California US | Top 11 "Best of the Fest" selection | [https://web.archive.org/web/20120402034959/http://sbiff.org/pub/2011OPG.html sbiff.org] |
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| align="center"| May 21–22, Jun 11 | align="left"| Seattle International Film Festival | Seattle, Washington US | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20110810053919/http://www.siff.net/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=44249&fid=206 siff.net] |
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| align="center"| Jul 18, Jul 25 | align="left"| Fantasia Festival | {{Laureate|Special Mention}} "for the resourcefulness and unwavering determination by a director to realize his unique vision" | [http://www.festivalfantasia.com/2011/en/films/film_detail.php?id=604 FanTasia] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120327205713/http://www.festivalfantasia.com/2011/en/films/film_detail.php?id=604 |date=2012-03-27 }} |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | Aug 10 – Love Live Nationwide Screening US |
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| align="center"| Sep 16 | align="left"| Athens International Film Festival | {{Laureate|Best Director}} | [http://en.aiff.gr/article.asp?catid=24169&subid=2&pubid=15173086 aiff.gr] |
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| align="center"| Sep 19 | align="left"| Lund International Fantastic Film Festival | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20120329193509/http://www.fff.se/en/film/love/ fff.se] |
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| align="center"| Sep 28 | align="left"| Fantastic Fest | Austin, Texas | | [http://fantasticfest.festivalgenius.com/2011/films/love_williameubank_fantasticfest2011 FantasticFest.com] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170620184039/http://fantasticfest.festivalgenius.com/2011/films/love_williameubank_fantasticfest2011 |date=2017-06-20 }} |
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| align="center"| Oct 9 | align="left"| London Int. Festival of Science Fiction Film | Closing Night Film | [http://www.sci-fi-london.com/festival/2011/oktoberfest/programme/feature/angels-and-airwaves-love Sci-Fi London] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304060845/http://sci-fi-london.com/festival/2011/oktoberfest/programme/feature/angels-and-airwaves-love |date=2016-03-04 }} |
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| align="center"| Oct 9, Oct 11 | align="left"| Sitges Film Festival | | [http://sitgesfilmfestival.com/eng/film/?id=10002095 Sitges Festival] |
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| align="center"| Oct 1, Oct 15 | align="left"| Gwacheon International SF Festival | Gwacheon, Gyeonggi-do | | [http://gisf.org/bbs/board.php?bo_table=movie&wr_id=29&page=3 gisf.org]{{Dead link|date=April 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} |
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| align="center"| Oct 17, Oct 20 | align="left"| Icon TLV | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20111209034017/http://www.icon.org.il/2011/node/2081 icon.org.il] |
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| align="center"| Oct 23 | align="left"| Toronto After Dark | {{Laureate|Best Special Effects}} | [https://web.archive.org/web/20111026061853/http://torontoafterdark.com/2011/films/love torontoafterdark.com] |
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| align="center"| Nov 11 | align="left"| Les Utopiales | Nantes, Pays de la Loire | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20120420011328/http://www.utopiales.org/index.php/fr/cinema/competition/longs-metrages/201-love utopiales.org] |
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| align="center"| Nov 12, Nov 18 | align="left"| Indonesia Fantastic Film Festival | | [https://web.archive.org/web/20120425085218/http://www.inafff.com/2011/index.php?modul=film&textid=293325064314 inaff.com] |
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| align="center"| Nov 16–18 | align="left"| American Film Festival | Wrocław, Lower Silesia | | [http://www.americanfilmfestival.pl/film.do?id=5689 AFF Poland] |
=Limited release=
{{Main|Angels & Airwaves Presents Love Live}}
Love was shown nationwide {{clarify|date=December 2012}} on August 10, 2011.http://www.fathomevents.com/concerts/event/angelsandairwaves.aspx{{dead link|date=May 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
=Home media=
Angels & Airwaves released a box set containing Love, the soundtrack to the film, Love Part I, and the band's fourth studio album Love Part II on November 8, 2011.
Reception
At the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, the film was originally slotted for three showings but two additional showings in the Arlington Theatre were added after some original showings sold out.
Dennis Harvey, for Variety, wrote "[The film's] spiritual abstruseness and the script's myriad other ambiguities might infuriate in a film less ingeniously designed on more tangible fronts. But Love delights with the detail of its primary set as well as in accomplished effects, consistently interesting yet subservient soundtrack textures (the sole original song is reserved for the closing-credit crawl) and a brisk editorial pace ..."{{cite web |url=https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117944550/ |title=Film Reviews: Love |publisher=Variety |date=2011-02-09 |accessdate=2011-02-10 |archive-date=2012-11-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107150737/http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117944550/ |url-status=live }}
Dustin Hucks, for Ain't It Cool News, wrote "Love can at times get very broad with scenes, dialogue, and flow ... if you're keen on clarity and the linear, Love is going to leave you frustrated. For others, however, – the challenge of understanding what is what may lead to a desire for repeat viewings, which for me – is a lot of fun ... This is a film that's clearly not for everyone – but has a lot to offer the Inception and Moon crowds."
Hucks continued to say Love was one of the most visually exciting low-budget films he had seen in some time and concluded with an overall endorsement: "Love is well worth seeking out in theaters – but don't miss it on DVD if you don't get the opportunity to view it in theaters."{{cite web |url=https://www.aintitcool.com/node/48561 |title=Dustin falls in love with ... well, LOVE! |publisher=Ain't It Cool News |date=2011-02-18 |accessdate=2011-02-20 |archive-date=2018-10-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181021070042/http://www.aintitcool.com/node/48561 |url-status=live }}
See also
- Apollo 13, a 1995 film dramatizing the Apollo 13 incident
- Gravity, 2013 3D science-fiction space drama film
- Moon, a 2009 British science fiction drama film
- List of films featuring space stations
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Love (2011 film)}}
- {{Official website|http://www.angelsandairwaves.com/}}
- {{Facebook|id=Love/185669401463186?sk{{=}}wall|name=Love}}
- {{IMDb title|1541874|Love}}
- [https://itunes.apple.com/us/movie/love/id475133903 Love] at the iTunes Preview
- File:Emblem CD.png {{UPC|811481012617}}
{{Angels & Airwaves}}
{{William Eubank}}
{{Tom DeLonge}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Love}}
Category:2010s English-language films
Category:2011 directorial debut films
Category:2011 science fiction films
Category:American Civil War films
Category:American post-apocalyptic films
Category:American science fiction drama films
Category:American space adventure films
Category:Films about astronauts
Category:Films directed by William Eubank
Category:Films set in the future
Category:Films shot in California