Annhilation by Jeff Vandermeer (6 points)

Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer, which I read and then also found out it was a movie...  So naturally, I watched the movie for comparison. 

As far as the week's topic of "weird" goes, the movie defiantly nailed it far  more than the book did. Visually demonstrating weird is much easier than telling it. Thus I feel like I did not react or enjoy this reading as much as I did watching the movie version.


The book differs in the movie from how it deals with "weird", though. In the novel, the team relies on journals of others and writings from the biologist to express to the audience how Area X is described and interpreted. However, in visual form, the movie had no need for journal writings to express just how "weird" the X was. Especially in both the movie and novel, the idea of "weird" seemed, in this case, to be strangely linked to a form of attraction as well.

 In the novel, it's seen as the biologist explores Area X and discovers all the forms of life, and at the end when she decides to stay to further understand the X and find her dead husband. In the movie, we see it as the group having their individual past issues and troubles, how they're driven, and attracted to the X as a way to get out of modern life. In this way, the idea of the "weird" attracting almost "weird" people, as indifferent.

However, at the end of everything, I feel like "weird" is a relative term to how you live. What one may deem "weird" another might see as normal.,

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