Renowned film composer Jóhann Jóhannsson — you’ll remember his Oscar-nominated score for Sicario, which thrummed like a revved-up heartbeat — makes a uniquely astonishing feature directorial debut with Last and First Men. Based on the hugely influential 1930 science fiction novel of the same name by British philosopher Olaf Stapledon, this is a cinematic tone poem contemplating the biggest, headiest issues that humanity ever confronts: evolution and extinction; the depths of time and the unfathomable expanse of the universe; the meaning of life, and what meaning we give to it. Why finding meaning — and ensuring a future for our children and our children’s children — is all that we have.

Not a traditional narrative, this is more akin to an illustrated audiobook: speaking to us is the disembodied voice of Tilda Swinton (Avengers: Endgame), as a person of the 18th human species billions of years in the future. We are of the first human species; she is of the last. Her people see an inescapable calamity approaching, and they wish to impart upon us… what? Not a warning, per se, but an appreciation of the immense story of humanity she briefly lays out before us, in her past but our future. There will be no great utopias, we are told, but if we’re lucky as individuals, we might live through one of the momentary flowerings of civilization amidst the “sluggish river” of human history.
By contrast, however, the serene yet startling black-and-white cinematography — by Sturla Brandth Grøvlen, who also recently shot the domestic nightmare that is Shirley — is devoid of people, and instead considers lonely, seemingly abandoned monuments to human effort. The mournful score — written by Jóhannsson, of course — underscores the ominous alarm that screams through Stapledon’s near-century-old words, probably unwittingly on the author’s behalf but clearly of great concern to Jóhannsson: that calamity is approaching for us, too, and we had better start it taking seriously if we’d like to escape the worst of it. (That’s global warming and the related degradation of our physical environment — all the damn plastic in the oceans! — for those who cannot yet see disaster barreling toward us, or don’t want to.)

Mesmerizing and haunting, this is an extraordinary debut. Alas, it will be Jóhannsson’s only film: he died in 2018. This would seem to lend an extra layer of ironic urgency of what he is saying here, that as thinking, self-aware creatures, being cognizant of our own individual mortality is not enough. We must also confront the reality that our awesome ability to alter the planet could be the death of our civilization, if not our species itself.
viewed as part of Ed Film Fest at Home, the digital-only 2020 Edinburgh International Film Festival


















It might be available elsewhere, but for anyone who wants to watch this (Tilda Swinton modern achitecture scifi asmr is my number one search query at pornhub, so I’m all in) it will available at BFI starting on July 30th:
https://player.bfi.org.uk/subscription/film/watch-last-and-first-men-2017-online
There is a 14 day free trial, then a £4.99 a month fee. If anyone knows of a site where we can legally see it sooner, please let me know. As far as I can tell, it’s no longer available at EIFF. I might have missed it – the site layout is very confusing.
The film will be on all the usual UK streaming outlets from July 30th. I’m sure it will be available in other regions soon. (It is no longer available at EIFF.)
Thank you, I’m looking forward to it. Now that you’re reviewing streaming content and are able to curate to a larger degree, there are a lot more movies that sound very appealing.
It makes me realize how little interest I had in the vast majority of wide releases at the theater. Streaming services are time vampires, so I’m going to hold off on subscribing, but a couple months a year to support smaller films sounds acceptable. I still refuse to ever use a smart phone though. Those things are terrifying.
so for us americans we simply have to wait until its available here? I really want to see this.
Uh, yeah, you simply have to wait. That’s what other people outside the US have to do all the time: wait until the movies they want to see are available in their region.
“Last and First Men.”
Now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time.
A long time.
I look forward to seeing it.
My shock that someone made a film of this novel is equaled only by my shock at the news that it’s good. Wow. I’ll have to make sure and see it.