Few science-fiction films are as quiet, patient, and philosophically demanding as Contact. On the surface, it tells the story of humanity’s first encounter with an extraterrestrial signal — a monumental scientific breakthrough wrapped in political tension, faith debates, and technological wonder. But beneath that premise lies a far more intimate question:
What kind of consciousness is actually capable of making first contact?
Rather than treating the film as a debate between science and religion, this analysis approaches Contact through the lens of the Major Arcana — not as mystical symbols, but as stages of psychological and spiritual development. Used this way, archetypes help us see where the story moves inward rather than outward, and where the real transformation takes place.
The intention here is twofold.
First, to understand how carefully the story is constructed — where its tensions arise, why certain conflicts feel inevitable, and why some events seem paradoxical until viewed from a deeper level. Contact has often been discussed for what it says about belief, proof, and skepticism, but less often for how it stages those questions through character, institution, and collapse.
Second, to explore how the film quietly mirrors our own lives. Because while most of us will never listen for signals from the stars, many of us recognize the deeper pattern: the urge to control meaning, the discomfort of uncertainty, and the slow realization that some truths cannot be forced into existence.
As usualy, Contact is not a story where all archetypes live inside a single protagonist. Some are carried by Ellie. Others belong to institutions, governments, and belief systems. Still others emerge only when those systems fail. The journey is not just personal — it is civilizational.
With that in mind, let’s walk through Contact archetype by archetype, and see how a story about outer space ultimately becomes a meditation on humility, surrender, and the kind of listening that makes real contact possible.
Major arcana archetypes in Contact
The Magician — will and manifestation ✅
When we first meet Ellie, she is already showcasing her Magician potential. As an amateur radio operator, she successfully connects a call from Madison, Wisconsin, to Pensacola, Florida. Even at this early stage, her will is oriented toward connection across distance — reaching beyond what seems immediately possible.
The Devil — opposition to the Magician ✅
Throughout the movie, Ellie is repeatedly opposed by bureaucratic structures. She is belittled by her boss, David Drumlin, and sidelined by committees and institutions.
But more importantly, she is not primarily opposed by individuals — she is opposed by systems that decide who is “acceptable.” Her atheistic worldview becomes a point of exclusion, even when her competence is undeniable.
Even Palmer, her close friend, challenges her. He does not oppose her aggressively, but he does challenge her will and worldview — introducing friction rather than obstruction.
Justice — balancing fear and choice, free will ✅
The positivity in Ellie is balanced by its opposite: fear, doubt, and uncertainty. Early in her life, this opposition takes the form of loss — the deaths of her parents in childhood.
With both parents gone, Ellie is forced to make decisions on her own. She grows up in a world where meaning must be chosen without guarantees, where certainty is absent and responsibility is personal. Justice here is not moral judgment, but the condition of choice under uncertainty.
The Hermit — loneliness and isolation ✅
Ellie is, in many ways, literally left alone on Earth. From this place of isolation, she begins to search for higher meaning. Her solitude is not withdrawal from the world, but the quiet state from which deeper listening becomes possible.
The High Priestess — inspiration and mystery ✅
From the Hermit’s position, the object of inspiration becomes most visible. In Ellie’s childhood, her father serves as that inspiration. After his death, she symbolically tries to reach him again through radio waves — an early expression of longing beyond the visible.
Later, the universe itself becomes the great object of mystery. It inspires Ellie’s actions and opens possibilities beyond human certainty, carrying clear High Priestess energy: mystery that invites inquiry but resists ownership.
The Lightning — disruption and change of course ✅
During Ellie’s childhood, there are no sudden bursts of truth that radically alter her path. She is already doing what she loves from the very beginning.
The true lightning strike comes later — when she hears the contact signal. This moment abruptly disrupts not her desire, but the world’s assumptions. It changes the course of events and forces humanity to confront something wholly unexpected.
The Star — hope and guidance ✅
The idea that there is more to life quietly drives Ellie forward. It guides her through setbacks, opposition, and despair. Even when certainty collapses, hope remains — not as optimism, but as direction.
The Empress — subtle ego and specialness ✅
Ellie generally keeps her ego in check and does not succumb to overt arrogance or entitlement. Still, she carries a subtle form of Empress energy through intellectual pride.
She takes pride in being a by-the-book scientist and repeatedly insists that belief must be grounded in proof. This is not vanity, but a guarded sense of specialness rooted in certainty.
The Wheel of Fortune — rises and reversals ✅
Ellie’s atheistic worldview brings real consequences. Even Palmer resents her position at times, and ultimately denies her the opportunity to become the first passenger on the contact device for that very reason.
In one pivotal moment, Palmer asks Ellie whether she loved her father. She answers yes. Palmer responds simply: “Prove it.” Ellie is left speechless and visibly embarrassed — a clear reversal of authority and certainty. The Wheel turns.
The Emperor — control, order, certainty ✅
Humanity acts as the Emperor. The collective belief is that contact can only be achieved through control, order, protocol, and certainty.
This is also Ellie’s worldview — at least initially. Meaning is something to be secured through evidence, structure, and verification.
Strength — manipulation and forcing the issue ✅
As pressure mounts, authority turns to manipulation. Ellie is pushed out of the mission politically, bureaucratically, and coercively.
More broadly, the government believes that the only way to execute first contact is to force the issue at all costs — to dominate uncertainty rather than meet it.
The Moon — illusion and twilight reasoning ✅
Forcing the issue produces only temporary or illusory results. The belief that authority, force, and control are fit to carry first contact proves to be a dangerous illusion.
This illusion is further revealed when David Drumlin — who earlier mocked Ellie’s attempts at contact — is chosen as the representative. Optics replace alignment.
Meanwhile, in quiet twilight, a second device is secretly built in Japan, hidden from public spectacle.
The Hanged Man — collapse of illusion, new perspective ✅
The terrorist explosion destroys the first contact device and shatters a core illusion: that authority, force, and control can mediate the sacred.
It also destroys the illusion that government can manipulate who the “correct” representative should be.
For a time, Ellie’s actions are suspended. She returns to New Mexico and to Kent, entering a period of waiting, reflection, and surrender.
The Hierophant — truth spoken without proof ✅
Gradually, truths begin to surface. The existence of the second device is revealed, and the true first representative — Ellie — comes back into view.
Later, Ellie herself becomes the Hierophant. She speaks her truth openly, even without proof reminds us that lived experience can precede explanation.
The Sun — sincerity and openness ✅
Before the second mission, Palmer visits Ellie. He admits that his earlier opposition was driven by fear rather than conviction. The moment is sincere, vulnerable, and unguarded — a true heart-to-heart exchange.
The Two Paths (Lovers) — determination over fear ✅
Despite the second machine being perceived as even more dangerous, Ellie chooses to proceed. She continues with the mission even as strange, almost supernatural events occur inside the capsule.
She chooses truth over fear and begins to trust a higher order beyond control.
This choice is mirrored later during her testimony before Congress. Under intense scrutiny, she refuses to recant her experience. She stands by what she knows to be true.
Death — ego dissolution and surrender ✅
In the presence of the vastness of space, Ellie’s scientific ego softens. She is left speechless by the scale and beauty of what she encounters.
But the true ego death occurs later — during her testimony. When she holds to her story despite having no scientific evidence, certainty, control, and intellectual dominance finally die.
The Chariot — absent ❌
Because Ellie does not transcend ego before the journey — clearly — and because her role during the mission is largely passive, there is no real opportunity for the Chariot archetype to appear. She does not conquer the journey; she is carried by it.
Resurrection — rebirth into integration ✅
Ellie leaves behind a purely reductionist certainty and is reborn into a self that allows for something greater. Science remains — but it no longer stands alone.
The World — reconnection and wholeness ✅
Although the committee does not believe Ellie, the world does. She is met with curiosity, warmth, and recognition from ordinary people.
Temperance — ordinary life, integrated and peaceful ✅
In the end, Ellie teaches children about the antenna array and the universe. Her life is quieter, moderated, and more whole.
She repeats Palmer’s words: “If there wasn’t any life out there, it would be a waste of space.”
The sentence signals integration — not conversion. She has reconnected with others and expanded her worldview without abandoning herself.
Closing Reflections
At its deepest level, Contact is the story of a scientific ego that struggles to let go — not because it is corrupt or malicious, but because it has learned to survive through certainty. It is a story about intelligence being asked to soften just enough to listen.
When we look closely at the terrorist attack, the apparent logic collapses. The bomber is framed as opposing an atheist representative, yet David Drumlin is chosen precisely because he publicly denies atheism. If belief alone were the issue, the explosion would make no sense. And yet, it happens anyway.
That contradiction reveals the truth of the moment.
The bombing is not a statement against Ellie.
It is not even a statement against belief or disbelief.
It is a statement against the idea of choosing a representative at all.
What is being rejected is the assumption that transcendence can be administered — that a committee, an institution, or an authority can decide who is worthy to stand before the unknown. The act of choosing itself becomes the illusion that must collapse.
If Contact were merely about a random physical encounter with another civilization, it wouldn’t matter who entered the machine. Any qualified human body would do. But the story is not constructed that way.
First contact in this film points inward as much as outward. It hints at contacting something higher within ourselves — something we already know cannot be forced, proven on demand, or reached through domination. Meaning, insight, and awe only arrive when certainty loosens its grip.
This is where the story quietly turns toward us.
Ellie is not chosen because she is superior.
She is not chosen because she believes or disbelieves correctly.
She is chosen because she stops trying to own the experience.
And in that moment, the film invites a subtle realization: we are all Ellie.
We, too, live in systems that try to decide what is acceptable.
We, too, are tempted to force meaning into existence.
We, too, wait for proof before trusting what we already feel.
Contact suggests that whatever we call “the higher” — truth, meaning, love, or understanding — does not respond to force. It responds to humility. It meets us only when we are willing to listen without claiming authority.
The journey does not choose the strongest.
It does not choose the loudest.
It does not choose the most certain.
It chooses the one who is willing to go without needing to be right.
And in that sense, Contact is not just a story about first contact with something beyond us — it is a quiet reminder that the invitation has always been there, waiting for us to stop forcing the door and simply step forward.
Thank you!
Ira