(Concluded from Part 1, above.)
The star beings were not human in shape. The world may not be ready to accept as credible that they look like us.
No, they were cuddly … heptapods.
What’s a heptapod? Well, they looked like octopi who walked on their seven tentacles; hence, heptapod.
One or more heptapod tentacle had an opening at the end, a little like an elephant’s trunk.
Their writing was beautiful, Zen-like (see below, right). Their gift to us was their language and what we discovered in it when we finished translating what they left with us.
I wouldn’t be surprised to find that a lot of what was left was pretty much similar to what is being beamed down to us regularly in our own channeled sources. Ooops. I’m forgetting. It was just a movie.
OK, so that’s channeling and future vision validated, And the existence of peaceful and wise extraterrestrials, a tear-jerking contextual flip, and I haven’t said anything about the excellent quality of the film as a film.
(7) It locked in the impact of the movie by providing tastefully-handled catharsis.
Amy’s daughter dies of a rare disease.
The same film that posed so many interesting questions to us also took us tastefully through Amy’s decline and death. The appeal to the emotions promoted bonding with the movie in me. I immediately flashed on my mother’s death and was sobbing away in my seat.
(8) In the course of the film we heard the star beings say that they were here to help humanity.
So what?
Human beings follow trends. The trend with “aliens” so far is for them to say “we’re here to eat you alive.” Or as an alien of similar shape to the heptapods said in Independence Day: “We will destroy you.”
Now, all of a sudden, along comes a really-well-done film that portrays “aliens” as here to help us – which they are of course. More truth presented on the screen, something we haven’t come to expect in recent years.
The only thing more I could ask would be to actually be in that scene. Which is exactly what the film promotes – what it calls “First Contact” and what we call “Disclosure.” With Disclosure comes First Contact and with that we’re in the scene, in the picture.
The entire message of the film has now entered the collective consciousness. Anyone want to print a T-shirt saying “We are Here to Help Humanity”? How about “There is No Time” or “We are One”?
This is useful stuff for a new view of our star family.
This is not the Cannes Festival. This was cinematic work on behalf of a world that works, by welcoming our major partners in the transformation of Planet Earth. Representing them that way is, I think, closer to the truth. And it promotes the Divine Plan for the reunion of civilizations at the end of the age.
Anyone else want to do a film? Perhaps this time starring galactics?