‘World of Tomorrow’: Science fiction that brims with soul – The Tide

A staple of early 2000s internet culture, Don Hertzfeldts morbid animationsincluding but not limited to stick figures gawking at giant spoons, anthropomorphic clouds bobbing atop a sea of blood, babies toppling down staircases and unnervingly long wisdom teeth stitcheshave collectively reached the epitome of surreal, macabre humor.

But despite the bizarre hilarity of classic shorts like Rejected (2000) or Wisdom Teeth (2010), Hertzfeldts longer projects have historically been a space to poke at larger philosophical beasts. His 2015 animated short film World of Tomorrow is no exception: through simple lines and blooming colors, the sci-fi story contemplates everything from our capacity for love to solar-powered robots that fear death. Yet, the focus of World of Tomorrow feels anything but scattered. Hertzfeldt effortlessly permeates his apocalyptic dystopia with the beauty of childhood whimsy, and the films core message of appreciating the present resounds because of it.

World of Tomorrow is a tale of two Emilys, or at least of one toddler-aged Emily and her third generation adult clone from 227 years in the future. In a signature monotone, clone Emily (Julia Pott) hollowly narrates the life shes lived. Meanwhile, Hertzfeldts four-year-old niece Winona Mae voices the original Emily, or Emily Prime, in all her unscripted, four-year-old gloryhappily burbling about triangles and shooting stars. But those shooting stars are actually dead bodies falling, as clone Emily warns, and the fate of our future world has been sealed by an incoming meteor.

But inevitable doom aside, humanity has otherwise found the key to immortality. Defying death, those who can afford it buy into the unending cycle of uploading memories into clone bodies. People spend their hours staring into screens that digitize and display the memories of past generationsuntil soon all there is to be seen are past generations staring into the same screens.

While Hertzfeldt makes apt commentary on the screen-centric culture we live in today, as well the disparities of social class (the wealthy brace for the apocalypse by uploading their consciousness into cubes; the poor launch themselves into the atmosphere and become the aforementioned dead bodies), its the seemingly silly details of this futuristic world that gives World of Tomorrow so much soul.

Clone Emily recounts falling in love with a rock, a fuel pump and a lumpy alien. She describes watching a memory six thousand times over, clinging to a sadness she does not fully comprehend but still chases because the emotion makes her feel human. The absurdity is comedic; its something wed expect from toddlers like Emily Prime. Its also heartbreaking, profoundly human and hauntingly familiar. Suddenly, we understand.

And perhaps thats Hertzfeldts appeal. Blurring the line of tragedy and comedy, World of Tomorrow aches with something universal.

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'World of Tomorrow': Science fiction that brims with soul - The Tide

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