Agent Halpern
Agent Halpern, in the unprecedented crisis of contact with alien civilisation, is a figure who represents the anxiety and hostile public opinion of the government and the populace. Contrasting with Louise Banks' pursuit of scientific understanding and a linguistic approach, he plays the symbolic role of showing how humanity fears and misunderstands an unknown entity.
The Government's Gaze: Between Anxiety and Control
Agent Halpern is one of the figures representing the government's response and the military dimension of the alien contact. Contributing to the formation of hostile public opinion toward the aliens amid global anxiety, he is cast in opposition to the side of Dr. Louise Banks, who advocates scientific inquiry and diplomatic communication. His existence visualises the core conflict the film addresses — the tension between 'the effort to understand' and 'the reaction based on fear.'
Agent Halpern's Functional Role
Agent Halpern, beyond a simple supporting character, is an important device for maintaining the narrative tension of the film. His perspective performs the following functions:
- Representing Public Anxiety: He represents the state of panic arising globally from the appearance of the shells (alien vessels). Expressing suspicion and hostility toward the aliens, he represents the psychology of the general public reacting to immediate threats rather than scientific evidence.
- Presenting a Military Perspective: As a government agent, he presents a military, national-security perspective that perceives alien life forms not so much as 'objects to be decoded' but as 'objects to be controlled or whose threat must be eliminated.' This constantly functions to apply the brakes to Louise's goal of 'communication.'
- Catalyst for Conflict: While Louise is engrossed in communicating with the aliens, the pressure of Agent Halpern and the government he symbolises acts as external pressure that prevents Louise from overlooking the danger of 'linguistic mistranslation.'
The Process of Forming Hostile Public Opinion
In the course of the film's development, Agent Halpern contributes to spreading distrust of the aliens. This goes beyond mere personal differences of opinion, expanding into fear and distrust on a national scale. In particular, when the message the aliens left is propagated in the mistranslated form of "Offer weapon," the government response symbolised by Agent Halpern is interpreted as an immediate military response and threat. In this process, humanity focuses on 'defence' for its own survival rather than on dialogue with alien civilisation.
Emphasising the Theme Through Contrast with Louise
Agent Halpern's character stands in stark contrast to Louise Banks'. If Louise is an 'interpreter' striving to understand the aliens' linguistic structure, grammatical nuances, and cultural background, Agent Halpern performs the role of a 'judge' who tries to interpret the aliens solely through the single frame of 'threat.' This contrast is a device that imprints on the audience the film's core theme: 'the nature of communication.' True communication begins not from 'what was said' but from grasping 'with what intention it was said' — and Agent Halpern's gaze constantly raises this question and reinforces it.
Why It Matters
Agent Halpern carries meaning beyond simply being a government agent. He symbolises the most important philosophical question the film poses: the danger of judgment based on fear. In the face of the unknown entity of aliens, the first attitude humans adopt is not 'understanding' but 'fear,' and Agent Halpern is a mirror showing how that fear leads to hostility and misjudgment on a national scale. His existence poses to the audience the question 'Is what we truly know really all there is?' — strengthening the work's thematic consciousness as a core narrative axis.
Other Character dives4
- arrow_outward
General Shang
General Shang is a figure symbolising national anxiety and distrust in the process of contact with alien civilisation. The decisions of the PLA he commands — based on the mistranslated message that the aliens are 'offering weapons' — become the decisive trigger for exploding global conflict and cutting communications between twelve nations. He dramatically shows the danger of the collective fear and nationalistic response humanity experiences before an unknown entity.
- arrow_outward
Louise Banks
Louise Banks is far more than a simple linguist — she is the figure who confronts the shocking truth, through contact with alien civilisation, that humanity's very concept of time may be an error. Her journey is the process of exploring the relationship between language and modes of thought, ultimately posing a philosophical question about humanity's destiny by understanding the non-linear concept of time in which past, present, and future coexist simultaneously.
- arrow_outward
Ian Donnelly
Ian Donnelly is not a simple scientist but a theoretical physicist responsible for the film's philosophical depth. Through contact with alien civilisation, he poses a fundamental question about the concept of 'the linearity of time' itself — long taken for granted by humanity. Adding a physical perspective to Louise's linguistic interpretation, he builds the core setting that the aliens' mode of thought follows the non-linear concept of time in which past, present, and future coexist simultaneously.

Back to the title
Arrival
14 deep dives in total