Last and First Men: An extraordinary, engrossing and moving piece of cinema

Review: The first and last film by composer Jóhann Jóhannsson, who died in 2018

These extraordinary, evocative objects are, in fact, a series of remarkable communist-era World War II memorials in the Balkan Mountains.
These extraordinary, evocative objects are, in fact, a series of remarkable communist-era World War II memorials in the Balkan Mountains.
Last and First Men
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Director: Jóhann Jóhannsson
Cert: Club
Genre: Sci-Fi
Starring: Tilda Swinton
Running Time: 1 hr 11 mins

The British philosopher and writer Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950) is one of the most influential science fiction writers of the 20th century. His books, however, have proved almost impossible to adapt. War of the Worlds (1953) producer George Pal bought the rights to Stapledon’s 1935 novel Odd John in the 1960s but failed to bring the book to the big screen.

Last and First Men (1930) is an even trickier cinematic prospect. A book of fascinating speculation rather than a conventional narrative, it projects a history of some two billion years and 18 distinct species of human, starting with our own, as they migrate from Earth and spread across the outer planets.

Last and First Men is the last and first film from Icelandic film composer Jóhann Jóhannsson (Sicario, Arrival) who died in 2018. Taking cues from Chris Marker’s still photographed La Jetée, Jóhannsson’s film marries cinematographer’s Sturla Brandth Grøvlen carefully composed geometrical, 16mm monochrome compositions,  Jóhannsson’s eerie electronica, and Tilda Swinton’s voiceover from 2 billion years in the future. (It’s a narrative no one else could have carried off.)

Stapledon’s sprawling, ambitious novel is effectively reduced down to ideas about loss as the last doomed humans ponder their fate and solve great mysteries.

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Laments that “Humankind did not choose decent suicide before the degeneration began” give way to “respect for the thing that destroys you.”

Angles not unlike Kubrick’s famous monolith shot recreate a ghostly world of alien artefacts. These extraordinary, evocative objects are, in fact, a series of remarkable communist-era World War II memorials in the Balkan Mountains, as commissioned by Tito. It’s one lost world standing in for another.

It ought to make for an impressive installation piece. Instead it’s an extraordinary, engrossing and strangely moving piece of cinema.

On BFI Player from tomorrow

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic