Arrival Quotes

  • Louise Banks: Now that's a proper introduction.

  • Ian Donnelly: [upon entering the alien ship] Holy fuck.

  • Louise Banks: "Non-zero sum game."

  • Agent Halpern: We have to consider the idea that our visitors are prodding us to fight among ourselves until only one faction prevails.

    Louise Banks: There's no evidence of that.

    Agent Halpern: Sure there is. Just grab a history book. The British with India, the German with Rwanda...

  • Colonel Weber: And remember what happened to the Aborigines. A more advanced race nearly wiped 'em out.

  • Louise Banks: Come back to me.

  • Ian Donnelly: You know I've had my head tilted up to the stars for as long as I can remember. You know what surprised me the most? It wasn't meeting them. It was meeting you.

  • Colonel Weber: Mornin'.

    Louise Banks: Colonel.

    Colonel Weber: [answering a previous question about the Sanskrit word for war and it's meaning] Gravisti. He says it means an argument. What do you say it means?

    Louise Banks: A desire for more cows.

  • Louise Banks: If you could see your whole life from start to finish, would you change things?

    Ian Donnelly: Maybe I'd say what I felt more often. I-I don't know.

  • Louise Banks: Who is this child?

  • Louise Banks: [narrating] Memory is a strange thing.

  • Louise Banks: Despite knowing the journey... and where it leads... I embrace it... and I welcome every moment of it.

  • Interpreter: In their final session, the alien said, "There is no time. Many become one."

  • Louise Banks: But now I'm not so sure I believe in beginnings and endings. There are days that define your story beyond your life. Like the day they arrived.

  • Ian Donnelly: [reading from a book by Louise Banks] "Language is the foundation of civilization. It is the glue that holds a people together. It is the first weapon drawn in a conflict."

  • Ian Donnelly: Well, the cornerstone of civilization isn't language, it's science.

  • Louise Banks: And "purpose" requires an understanding of intent. We need to find out, do they make conscious choices or is their motivation so instinctive that they don't understand a "why" question at all. And-And biggest of all, we need to have enough vocabulary with them that we understand their answer.

  • Ian Donnelly: [narrating] Like their ship or their bodies, their written language has no forward or backward direction. Linguists call this "nonlinear orthography," which raises the question, "Is this how they think?"

  • Agent Halpern: We're a world with no single leader. It's impossible to deal with just one of us.

  • Louise Banks: Trust me, you can, uh, understand communication and still end up single.

  • Louise Banks: I forgot how good it felt to be held by you.

  • Costello: Abbott is death process.

  • 8-Year-Old-Hannah: The show is called "Mommy and Daddy Talk to Animals".

  • Louise Banks: [narrating] So, Hannah... This is where your story begins. The day they departed. Despite knowing the journey... and where it leads... I embrace it. And I welcome every moment of it.

  • Louise Banks: The weapon is their language. They gave it all to us. Do you understand what that means?

    Colonel Weber: So we can learn heptapod. If we survive.

    Louise Banks: If you learn it, when you really learn it, you begin to perceive time the way that they do. So you can see what's to come. But time, it isn't the same for them. It's non-linear.

  • Ian Donnelly: If you immerse yourself into a foreign language, then you can actually rewire your brain.

    Louise Banks: Yeah, the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. It's the theory that the language you speak determines how you think and...

    Ian Donnelly: Yeah, it affects how you see everything.

  • Louise Banks: [narrating] We're so bounded by time, by its order. But now I am not so sure I believe in beginnings and endings.

  • [first lines]

    Louise Banks: [narrating] I used to think this was the beginning of your story. Memory is a strange thing. It doesn't work like I thought it did. We are so bound by time, by its order.

    Louise Banks: [coddling her baby girl] Okay. Okay. Come back to me. Come back to me. Come back to me.

    Louise Banks: [later playing with her in the yard] Stick 'em up! Are you the sheriff in this here town? These are my tickle guns, and I'm gonna getcha!

    6-Year-Old-Hannah: No!

    Louise Banks: You want me to chase you? You better run!

  • Ian Donnelly: [upon first meeting] Priority one: What do they want and where are they from? And beyond that, how did they get here? Are they capable of faster-than-light travel? I've prepared a list of questions to go over, starting with a series of "handshake" binary sequences...

    Louise Banks: How about we just talk to them before we start throwing math problems at them?

    Colonel Weber: This is why you're both here. I'll bring the coffee...

    Ian Donnelly: Coffee with some aliens...

  • Louise Banks: [after confronting the aliens for the first time] Am I fired?

    Colonel Weber: You're better than the last guy.

    Louise Banks: That doesn't make me feel any better.

  • Louise Banks: [facing the aliens] So, what are we gonna call them?

    Ian Donnelly: I don't know. I was thinking Abbott and Costello.

  • Ian Donnelly: [narrating] Why did they park where they did? The world's most decorated experts can't crack that one. The most plausible theory is that they chose places on earth with the lowest incidence of lightning strikes. But there are exceptions. The next most plausible theory is that Sheena Easton had a hit song at each of these sites in 1980. So, we just don't know.

  • Ian Donnelly: As I watch you steer us around these communication traps that I didn't even know existed, it's like, "what?" I guess that's why I'm single.

    Louise Banks: Trust me, you can understand communication and still end up single.

  • [last lines]

    Louise Banks: If you could see your whole life from start to finish, would you change things?

    Ian Donnelly: Maybe I'd say what I feel more often. But I... I don't know. You know, I've had my head tilted up to the stars for as long as I can remember. You know what surprised me the most? It wasn't meeting them. It was meeting you.

    [they hug]

    Louise Banks: I forgot how good it felt to be held by you.

    Ian Donnelly: You wanna make a baby?

    Louise Banks: Yes. Yeah.

  • Louise Banks: If all I ever gave you was a hammer...

    Colonel Weber: Everything's a nail...

  • Louise Banks: Let's say that I taught them Chess instead of English. Every conversation would be a game. Every idea expressed through opposition, victory, defeat. You see the problem? If all I ever gave you was a hammer...

    Colonel Weber: Everything's a nail.

  • Louise Banks: We don't know if they understand the difference between a weapon and a tool.

  • Louise Banks: I don't know Mom, I'm watching the same news coverage you are. Mom, please don't bother with that channel, how many times do I have to tell you those people are idiots.

Arrival

Director: Denis Villeneuve

Language: English,Russian,Mandarin Release date: November 11, 2016