E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial is celebrating its 30th
 anniversary.  And regardless of whatever official commendations are 
there to further canonize Steven Spielberg’s warm suburban love story 
between a lost alien and a lonely middle child, my increasing devotion 
to it is of such a personal nature that I have to wonder if this film, 
of all films, is the central one in my life. This is not to call it the 
best, though it warrants consideration for such “list” accolades as any 
other masterpiece, being one of the 1980s’ great American films 
alongside Raging Bull, Blue Velvet, and Hannah and Her Sisters, but I mean central,
 that spark of solar conception around which everything has since grown 
and now orbits – as both a movie goer and a human being. Has any other 
movie influenced my attitudes and memories so much? Even my sense of 
family room afternoons as a child is colored in the same hazy glowing 
beams of Allen Daviau’s E.T. cinematography, and the suburban sprawl of Spielberg’s California is recognized as my sprawl in Richfield, Minnesota.
Encountering it now, I can hardly contain myself emotionally, as if I
 were experiencing my deepest and youngest self, the moment of becoming a
 conscious human being.  After all, it was during the film’s release, 
the summer of 1982, that I had the earliest memories of being in a dark 
movie theater, clapping my hands over my ears and eyes for fear of what 
was projected above (my primary response to E.T., I think, wasn’t comfort, but great fear).
 Memories were achieving a degree of cohesiveness, fragmented moments 
like sounds and clicks becoming words, then coming together to make 
complete sentences, sensations morphing into thought. Working in 
accordance with the iconography I was seeing in the Catholic Church, 
Spielberg was working out my own mythological or religious system, or 
pattern by which I psychologically interpreted things. In retrospect one
 can easily see the parallels between E.T. and myth, of 
miracles, peace, and resurrection; but I also remember the two most 
horrifying and indelible visual impressions that haunted me at that 
time, obsessing me almost morbidly: one was Christ crucified; the other 
was E.T., pale and sprawled out on the floor, near death. Did E.T. do
 to me what E.T. did for Elliott (Henry Thomas), and what Christ – like 
other archetypal heroes – did for all humanity, where I was unwittingly 
bound to it, as if I were an extension of it?
E.T. is a fairy tale of connection, resurrection, and 
departure, of the relationship between thought and feeling, reality and 
fantasy.  I had similar sensations with Moonrise Kingdom this 
summer, another fairy tale that, in Wes Anderson’s words, is a memory of
 a childhood fantasy. Spielberg and Anderson skillfully wove meditations
 of an adolescent frontier under colonial attack from the featureless 
practicalities of adulthood, the sprawl of development (I feel the same 
thing in my favorite music album of recent years, Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs).
 Watching him as a child, Spielberg had me looking out into the cosmos 
and the future; as an adult, Anderson turned me around to gaze back at 
beach-shore monuments that time would swallow. The emotional depths of 
both of these perfect little fairy tales of youth direct to something 
beyond logical steps of catharsis, instead hitting a nerve of awe. They 
are intimate and local stories harboring a cosmos, one encapsulating a 
Redeemer myth and the other the Great Deluge, where a broken family – 
like a species in the schisms of Nature – is healed and illuminated, if 
perhaps only temporarily. We also saw this in Benh Zeitlin’s Beasts of the Southern Wild this
 year, another Flood myth existing less in the context of post-Katrina 
New Orleans than the boundless cosmos of a young girl’s interaction with
 Nature. There too, the adult world, sophisticated and technological 
civilization, almost deliberately evokes E.T. with faceless men in sterile white suits, the resources of their logic canceling out magic.
As different as Spielberg and Anderson may be stylistically, a 
generation apart and appealing to different moviegoers, the effect that 
both of their films have on me is a reminder of their mutual place as 
two great architects of childhood attachment and loss. They’re both 
children of divorce, as I am, and in both of their cases the parents 
split when the directors were teenagers.  As filmmakers of their 
respective generations, they are positioned culturally in a way that 
relates to their movies. The paternal reliability of American life was 
obliterated by Vietnam and Watergate, and picturesque calm was prey to 
an uncertain chaos, much like Amity being terrorized by the cthonian 
beast in Jaws.  After the unveiled curtains of corruption in his ‘70s peers, the despair and loneliness in The Godfather, Chinatown, The Conversation, The Fury, and Taxi Driver,
 Spielberg – and George Lucas – channeled a need for re-established 
order and escape, like with the friendly aliens of cosmic reassurance in
 Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Chief Brody’s killing of the shark in Jaws, and Indiana Jones, with the help of God’s wrath, melting some evil Nazi flesh in Raiders of the Lost Ark.
 Though not a political conservative, one could say he filled the same 
need that Reagan did for a lot of people, and like with Reagan, we could
 say that role was, on the whole, for the worse (not necessarily applied
 to Spielberg as an artist, but in terms of where Hollywood went, with 
Spielberg becoming an institution of grand-scale escapist moviemaking).
Wes Anderson, likewise, grew out of the ‘90s “lost generation” of 
filmmakers, the children of the ‘70s New Wave revolutions and the 
Un-Greatest Generation. He is Telemachus. Like Paul Thomas Anderson and 
David O. Russell, Wes Anderson is privileged but dysfunctional, pained 
in his search for a father beyond a biological father, like Stephen 
finds Bloom in Joyce’s Ulysses or Hans Castorp caught between Settembrini, Naphta, and Peeperkorn in Mann’s The Magic Mountain. 
 The affectations of style, target to so much criticism and derided as 
“whimsy” or indulgent, point to a need to affirm one’s own sense of self
 in a crowded house, while also paying tribute to the past so as to find
 some kind of spiritual family, like Antoine Doinel reverently 
plagiarizes Balzac in Truffaut’s The 400 Blows (Truffaut is 
unsurprisingly a huge influence on both Spielberg and Anderson).  In the
 excesses of our post-modern culture, where everything is a reference to
 something else – and so any gesture is muted and hollow – Anderson is 
looking for the stability of a meaningful framework, a temporal context,
 not cheap quirks.  In Bottle Rocket, Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic, The Darjeeling Limited, Fantastic Mr. Fox, and Moonrise Kingdom, families are spread apart, broken, uncommunicative, full of resentment, and unreliable.  Moonrise, with two adolescent protagonists whose appearances recall Bud Cort in Harold and Maude and Faye Dunaway in Bonnie and Clyde,
 and set in 1965, just before the ascendancy of the “New Hollywood” (and
 cultural disillusionment), is a love letter to a time before the Flood.
 The “Cuckoo Song” playing during its unbelievably executed conclusion 
references the passing of summer months as autumn begins, and the 
private treasures of the past have to fly away, much like Spielberg’s 
E.T. on his spaceship, and memories undergoing erosion through time.
E.T. has the spirit of a silent film, images generating 
emotional reactions that fly above language.  The dialogue scenes, the 
first of which occurs about eight minutes in, often have the lightness 
of improvisation, sometimes bearing the quality of the director’s hero 
and Close Encounters costar Francois Truffaut and his films 
about children, something that is markedly lacking in his later films 
about innocence. Gestures, glances, and movements communicate enough to 
us, and while many stories are a little too overt with their messages, E.T. often
 wordlessly gets to its theme of good will.  It absorbs through images 
and touches the heart, with sentiments that evolve into language and are
 bridged to the head.
Few films may engender a simple notion of compassion as this
 one, as sympathy exudes from it like the glowing red orbs inside the 
extra-terrestrials. Tellingly, the first we see of E.T. is his fingers 
in close-up, pulling a branch, the hand looking like a Peace sign. In 
the director’s own words, E.T. is essentially “an emissary of Peace,” 
and so a figure in opposition to the tough talk of Reagan’s Cold War.  
We even see a character wearing a “No Nukes” t-shirt. I think it’s 
ironic that the other big movie of 1982, and the victor over E.T. at the Academy Awards, was Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi, and yet the epic historical film pales in comparison in its theme of compassion to the alien love story.
Though there is no violence in E.T., or even a “villain,” 
there are subtexts of aggression throughout.  The film begins very 
frighteningly, with darkness, smoke, shadows, and unseen creatures 
leaving sign of themselves through the hollow brush or a swing set. The 
mood is that of a malevolent horror film, just as it’s a dystopian 
science fiction world when the top secret government officials, led by 
“Keys” (Peter Coyote), capture E.T. and begin to run tests on him. The 
world of families is warm and affluent, but marked with aggression. In 
the household of Elliott’s family, we see it immediately as the older 
brother Michael (Robert MacNaughton) has his friends over for a Dungeons
 & Dragons-type of role playing game, with players in an alternative
 universe of fantasy rolling dice for power and dominance. Elliott is 
picked on by the other boys, some of whom grab knives when they 
investigate the strange sounds outside (“Put the knives away,” the 
mother, Mary (Dee Wallace), instructs them, though they don’t listen). 
When Elliott hurts his mother’s feelings by mentioning how their father 
is in Mexico with his new lover, Michael says, “I’m going to kill you.” 
 To keep little sister Gertie (Drew Barrymore) silent about the newly 
discovered E.T., her doll is threatened with dismemberment (with Elliott
 mimicking classic bloodsucker Count Dracula).  Showing E.T. his toys, 
Elliott demonstrates how, with his Star Wars action figures, 
“you can have wars,” and shows off two fictional characters shooting and
 killing each other. As peaceable and sheltered as Spielberg’s suburbs 
are, it is a world of murder and power, where, so Elliott shows, “the 
fish eat the fish food, the shark eats the fish, and no one eats the 
shark.” Relationships are undercut by hurled insults like, famously, 
“penis breath,” or a schoolyard joke where the alien’s home is suggested
 as “your anus, get it? Your anus!”
This is the horror underlying nature. Alien invaders are also interpreted as dangerous, like with the arcade game Space Invaders, which is referenced on a t-shirt, or the action figures from Star Wars.
 In Elliott’s science class we see a historical chart of history, and 
the ominous warning of “extinction,” relating to the species that 
couldn’t adapt. Certainly, the pain that Mary feels regarding her broken
 marriage has to do with being an older woman losing time to her 
responsibilities as her husband is with someone who is presumably 
younger and more available. When the science teacher, a faceless 
emissary of necessity and awful truths of what underlies nature, passes 
out cotton swabs to poison to dozens of frogs for dissection, he says, 
“They won’t feel anything. They won’t be hurt,” but you can’t help but 
think the science project isn’t, for Spielberg, somewhat analog to the 
gas chambers of Auschwitz. Civilization buffers the reality and horror 
of loss and death, as we see Michael’s Halloween costume, a fake knife 
piercing his head. We discern that his earlier costume idea was a 
“terrorist,” a line that was eliminated from Spielberg’s 2002 DVD 
re-release of E.T., in addition to walkie-talkies taking the 
place of shot-guns carried by federal agents during the climactic chase.
 Thankfully, Spielberg has listened to his audience and restored the 
original 1982 cut (and eradicating the superfluous CGI shots of E.T.), 
which also re-establishes the subtext of violence that underlies the 
film’s power as a document about peace and love in a lonely and cruel 
universe.
|  | 
| The author in less dignified, if more innocent, days. | 
E.T. and his species are, according to Spielberg and screenwriter 
Melissa Mathison, plants.  He’s an earthy creature, moist and brown, 
transparent when his heart glows, and attached to nature. When E.T. 
takes a plant from the ground, he’s careful to get it by the roots, 
holding it like a nurturing caretaker. He looks up reverently at the 
great trees around him, and a cut to a rabbit nearby reinforces a kind 
of one-ness with the environment.  E.T. alludes to a Christ figure, 
another “man who fell to earth” (I’ve always found it neat that 
Scorsese’s Last Temptation of Christ has a few shots modeled on Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth,
 along with David Bowie as Pontias Pilate, associating God-as-Man to 
alien being), bringing a message of peace, eventually dying, 
resurrecting, and ascending back to the heavens after instructing us all
 to “Be Good” (meanwhile, Elliott falling asleep before E.T. disappears 
in the woods clearly echoes Gethsemane). He is also the Buddha, a 
spiritual wanderer who loves and liberates all living things, 
psychically freeing the doomed frogs in Elliott’s science class.  The 
construction of the alien’s grace owes much to Mathison, a Buddhist who 
also wrote the screenplay for Scorsese’s Dali Lama biopic Kundun.  E.T. is a heart and he loves, Elliott’s “ouch” becoming his “ouch.” He sympathizes with the Other, and heals. E.T. is a commercial work of art sincerely interested in the idea of kindness.
But there’s a lot of hunger in E.T., and this gets back to 
the cruel and base necessities of the world, of dog-eat-dog (or 
shark-eat-fish), of prosperity as victory, of rabid consumption. The 
film is replete with the idea of eating: the pizza that plays alongside 
the Dungeons and Dragons game (and is accidentally dropped by Elliott 
when he hears mysterious sounds in the shed); the trail of Reese’s 
Pieces Elliott leaves for E.T.; the shark eating the fish; and finally 
E.T.’s attempt to eat a Hot Wheels toy car (cars denoting excessive 
guzzling as much as anything).  We see both Elliott and E.T. raid the 
refrigerator, picking through the health food to find something tasty, 
E.T. acquiring a fondness for Coors beer – of which he drinks too much.
|  | 
| Consuming mass quantities: "E.T." raids the fridge and has a Coors.Add caption | 
Is that what happened with E.T. in culture? The film is an easy target for criticism because how it was, along with Star Wars,
 so successful in its tie-in marketing. Whatever its Zen meditations, 
you could say that the pajamas, dolls, Halloween costumes, and Reese’s 
dispensers sold on a mass scale were good fodder for “ugly Americans.” 
That’s why it’s important to watch the film not as a spectacle but as an
 earnest and observant drama about suburban life, because I think 
Spielberg is cluing us into the concept of “too-muchness,” be it the 
enormous drive way at Elliott’s home or the alien’s appetite (“Is he a 
pig? He sure eats like one,” Gertie says while E.T. chows down). 
Industry is part of E.T.’s design, as we see those tall trees, 
on which E.T. looked in awe during the opening minutes, cut down and 
laying lifelessly on the ground later, when Elliott and E.T. bike into 
the wilderness so that the Speak’n Spell “phone home” device can be 
constructed. Industry is the outlay of the sprawl, as what we see is 
land bought and under development, the human world encroaching on the 
forest. The Dungeons and Dragons conversation at the beginning mentions 
money, and though there’s no “winning” at life like in role-playing, we 
hear “money helps.
Industry, the heart, and the mind were key motifs in one of the first science fiction films, Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, where we’re told, “The mediator between head and hands must be the heart!’
 This is probably the story of Spielberg’s career, as he’s known as the 
great manipulator, pulling emotional chords like a puppet master and 
provoking his audience to move in accordance to his wishes. Sometimes, 
like with E.T. and its masterful dialectical opponent A.I., where Kubrickian skepticism is married to Spielbergian poignancy, it is remarkable. E.T. is filled with sentiment, but doesn’t feel sentimental, and the manipulations of A.I. present
 the filmmaker allowing his own dissection and deconstruction by way of 
his elder guide Kubrick, like Gigolo Joe (Jude Law) leads on the loving 
mecha David (Haley Joel Osment). I am tremendously affected by Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade,
 as Dr. Henry Jones (Sean Connery) grabs Indiana (Harrison Ford), whom 
he thought dead, and exclaims, “I thought I lost you, boy!” before 
capturing his restraint and steady poise again. Other times, like in 
Spielberg’s Oscar-baiting historical dramas – The Color Purple, Empire of the Sun, Schindler’s List, Amistad, Saving Private Ryan, Munich - excellent
 as they may be in some cases, the maneuvers, aided by composer John 
Williams, are potent but more transparent: “I could have done more,” 
“Give us free,” “Earn this,” and so on. Maybe E.T. and A.I. are aided by their stature as fairy tales or metaphors, though that excuse certainly doesn’t work for Hook, the director’s 1991 Peter Pan misfire.
|  | 
| Transference of cinematic images as memory: "A.I.: Artificial Intelligence" (2001) | 
The newest Spielberg film is Lincoln, coming out in a few 
weeks time, where the broken family is a divided nation, and the 
struggling father, Abraham Lincoln, has to brilliantly maneuver the 
passing of legislation to ensure legal rights for Americans of all 
races, and end the bloodiest of wars in a nation’s history. Already, 
Spielberg’s detractors are out for blood and waiting for him to make a 
hagiographic and treacly historical spectacle. But Lincoln is an 
appropriate subject for Spielberg not only as another addition to his 
list of struggling fathers to harness chaos (Lincoln may be linked then 
to Chief Brody from Jaws) or as another film about race 
relations and war, always fascinating for him as they are. But it was 
Lincoln who, like Spielberg, entreated his audience, the American 
people, to his side through emotions. Historian Roy Blount Jr. 
paraphrases Lincoln, “In order to ‘win a man to your cause,’ you must 
first reach his heart, ‘the great high road to his reason.’” Not 
surprisingly, the film Lincoln has a subtext of social 
performance, of the “legal” and “official” stepping on the stage as 
representatives of human motivations and beliefs. Written by Tony 
Kushner, it is a collision of myth, history, and individuals 
understanding that they are participating in the ceaseless construction 
of myth, of stories and parables, of a drama or history book. Language lays out who we are, and also how we
 are. A person’s worth tragically – or victoriously – amounts to words, 
words, words, much like the names typed onto Schindler’s list.
E.T. doesn’t talk when we first meet him. He purrs and bleats like a 
house pet, his eyes and hands searching around curiously for 
information. He learns by connecting to objects with his eyes and hands.
 It’s through looking that he and Elliott become linked 
emotionally, the same way that moviegoers are unwittingly linked to a 
film they’re watching. The first moment when Elliott and E.T. come face 
to face in a field, the screams of the alien are mirrored by Elliott’s 
shriek, and Spielberg cuts to various angles around the child as if the 
totality of the film’s matrix were absorbing him. Later on, after E.T. 
has followed Elliott’s trail of candy, we finally see the two of them 
together in the same shot, the creature’s placid face lit and revealed. 
E.T. is tired, Elliott is tired. Later, E.T. is surprised by an opening 
umbrella, which makes Elliott surprised in the other room. “Elliott 
thinks his thoughts,” posits a scientist examining the two,  as they  
both are afflicted with deathly illness. “No,” Michael corrects. 
“Elliott feels his feelings.”  In this friendship, the lonely boy understands feeling,
 something Michael earlier chided him for lacking after Elliott brought 
up their father’s alternative romantic relationship in the presence of 
Mary. “Why don’t you grow up? Think how other people feel for a
 change.” Feelings denote a kind of sentience, a being-ness, indicated 
by how the science teacher justifies to the schoolchildren the 
legitimacy of killing frogs for dissection because “they won’t feel anything.”
 But Elliott looks at the doomed creature through the glass jar and 
senses something. At the same time, E.T. watches television and reads 
comic strips, feeling something – and then constructing a plan.
The scene of E.T. watching The Quiet Man, directed by John 
Ford and starring John Wayne, feels like the film’s central set-piece, 
the eye-of-the-duck so to speak. E.T. stares in amazement at Wayne 
grabbing Maureen O’Hara, bringing her close and kissing her. At the same
 time, with the sound of Elliott’s classroom replaced by the ferocious 
wind of The Quiet Man, Elliott is compelled to repeat what E.T.
 is seeing, taking a beautiful girl and planting his own classic movie 
kiss, before the science teacher grabs him and takes him away to be 
punished for releasing the doomed amphibians. It’s a beautiful statement
 on the communicative effect of cinema, demonstrating how affecting our 
emotions affects the development of our thoughts, of language. 
For it’s soon after this scene that E.T. evolves the power to form and 
imitate words, taking cue from Gertie and Big Bird on Sesame Street (another
 reason not to vote for Mitt Romney: Big Bird taught E.T. how to talk!) 
 The recognition of the letter “b” leads to Gertie’s encouragement, 
“Good!” And so E.T. learns to relay the great message of the film, “Be 
good.”
Soon after, E.T. is literally clothed by civilization, wearing a 
dress, hat, and wig, repeating his name (“E.T., E.T., E.T.!”) and 
Elliott’s, and finally pointing out, via a comic strip, his plan to 
“phone home.” It’s not accidental that the main tool he uses for his 
phoning contraption is a Texas Instruments Speak’n Spell, an educational
 toy popular in the 1980s for the development of language skills 
(specifically spelling). Sight leads to feeling, leads to understanding,
 leads to language and thought. Critics of Spielberg are wrong to say 
that E.T. is only there because of its appeal to the 
emotions (the implication being this is how you take advantage of 
people, infantilizing them, and dumbing them down – and yes, Spielberg 
isn’t wholly not guilty either). As the film bridges alien and human, it
 also links feeling to intellect. While E.T.’s words in the film are 
first evidently based on repeating what he’s heard others tell him, 
after his heart-glowing resurrection we hear him directly answer a 
question. “Does this mean they’re coming?” Elliott asks, regarding 
E.T.’s fellow space travelers. “Yes,” the alien replies. In the final 
scene, E.T. offers “thank you” to Michael, tells Gertie to “be good,” 
and repeats a line Elliott told him when they first met. In an early 
scene, Elliott pointed at his chest, saying “I’ll be right here,” before
 leaving E.T. in his room for a moment.  But in the closing minutes of 
their relationship, E.T. says those words – “I’ll be right here” – and 
points at Elliott’s head.
The link of sight to emotion and then to truth/action is elsewhere in Spielberg’s histories, such as Schindler’s List,
 when Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) follows a young Jewish girl in red 
during the liquidation of a Jewish ghetto; he recognizes the girl’s 
corpse later on, compelling him to free his doomed Jewish workers.  In Lincoln,
 we notice young Tad Lincoln obsessing over photographs of slaves, their
 backs scarred from floggings and their prices for purchase beneath 
them. From such morbid images, he is stirred to ask questions of the 
black servants in the White House (“Were you whipped?”), about their 
personal histories, something which will drive forward the dialectical 
course of racial relations, of injustice in conflict with activism and 
freedom, in the future. For Spielberg, cinema is sentiment and truth 
sewn together. In his world, we come together and watch, 
falling in love with imaginary friends, an image wondrously displayed as
 Elliott caresses a purring E.T. while they listen to Mary tell a Peter 
Pan story to Gertie, spying through the blinds.

As when I write about any classic film, I indulgently really often 
talk about myself, there’s a final note on my personal relationship to E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial,
 pertaining to how I imagine this film influenced my relationship to my 
domestic pets over the years. E.T. is, as I mentioned, akin to a 
house-pet in how he purrs. At the time of the picture’s release, I have 
my first memories of being attached to pets, like a cat named Muffin, 
with whom I would lie and stare at for sustained periods, not really 
saying anything, but repeatedly murmuring wordless noises (I was three. 
Give me a break). E.T. is very much a movie about pets, even if
 its titular character is a form of advanced intelligence with his own 
home in a galaxy far, far away. We anthropomorphize animals, giving them
 human traits and thoughts that they probably don’t possess, to make 
them more familiar to us (just as we give our dolls characteristics, 
which makes the shot of E.T. hiding amongst Gertie’s stuffed animal 
collection significant, or Gertie’s devotion to her threatened favorite 
doll). Even if they’re dim-witted, it’s natural to think that cats and 
dogs actually know more than we do. But they don’t have language, and so
 they have no kind of thought structure similar to ours. Still, we make 
them one of us. It’s charming that Spielberg and Mathison name the dog 
in Elliott’s family “Harvey,” a nod to the giant bunny befriended by 
James Stewart in Frank Capra’s film (at one time going to be remade by 
Spielberg with Tom Hanks). The dog is a sort of double for the alien, 
and the two are confused for each other when Elliott’s explores the 
strange noises in the shed.  At the end of the picture, it’s Harvey who 
gives E.T. the final farewell, a wordless one, before turning back to 
his human family.
So in a way, our pets are imaginary friends like E.T., with shorter 
life spans ensuring that they have to go away before we’re fully grown 
up or fully grown old and ready to shuffle down our own mortal coils. 
They’re vulnerable and dependent on us, helpless with a true innocence, 
lacking malice (even the villainous shark in Jaws is just 
hungry, its cruelty only a human projection; Quint’s monologue of the 
USS Indianapolis, about the ship that delivered the atomic bomb, is very
 ironic, given the damage the monsters of god inflict is insignificant 
when compared to what humans do to each other). Elliott’s kindness and 
openness to E.T. is the same care one has for a pet, and with 
Spielberg’s message of kindness, it reminds me of Milan Kundera’s words 
from The Unbearable Lightness of Being, as the novel’s two 
principle characters deal with the cancer of a dog who has been with 
them throughout their entire relationship. He writes, “True human 
goodness, in all its purity and freedom, can come to the fore only when 
its recipient has no power. Mankind’s true moral test, its fundamental 
test (which is deeply buried from view), consists of its attitude 
towards those who are at its mercy: animals.”  Though we might say 
Spielberg at times epitomizes the homo sentimentalis “kitsch” 
that Kundera derides, I take this to heart when hearing Keys’ words to 
Elliott in the governmental hospital, when he expresses how glad he is 
that Elliott was the first person E.T. met.
Another cat who’s been close to me, Fefu, has been sick this past week, and it’s not been easy evaluating my memories of E.T. along
 with its images while understanding the mortality of my special little 
friend, who’s been with me these last six years. E.T.’s purring is her 
purring, and I’d do anything I could to keep her safe, happy, and 
healthy. But Spielberg’s film is also consoling for these tremors, I 
feel, addressing the turmoil – and necessity – of attachment before 
entropy and death sets in. Moonrise Kingdom was also strikingly
 filled with animals, whether performed by children in a Benjamin 
Britten opera of Noah’s Ark, or the several cats populating the house of
 Bill Murray and Frances McDormand (one of whom comes along with the 
young girl who escapes into the wilderness). As Anderson’s camera tracks
 through the house of sleepy felines in 1965, one realizes that all of 
these creatures are now long passed away, like the birds from the 
“Cuckoo Song,” or the protagonists’ innocence. Anderson and Spielberg 
entreat us to cherish the creatures over whom we hold “dominion,” the 
wordless but breathing ornaments of memory who provoke the most basic 
and essential sympathy, worth more than money. Whatever power people 
have in their realms and conquests over the sprawl, in families and 
communities, these two films, one 30 and blooming in its age while the 
other is a glowing infant, are viewfinders to what makes existence both 
precious and mysterious.







 
