âNoomi saw a childlike similarity between David and her character Elizabeth Shaw, since he is also childlike and curious about the outside world.
Fassbender agreed that he thought that was why David took a particular interest in her, even while she was in cryostasis, while sheâs asleep and he goes into her dreams and Fassbender thought that this was an intrusive things to do to her, but he was curious about her throughout.
Her character would be seen to make making her various discoveries and thereâs something about her thatâs different from the rest of the crew members, a certain curiosity.
So Fassbender thought that David was investing in her more than he is any of the other crew members on board, and so found her a interesting case.
Perhaps David was fascinated that she was a scientist and yet she had a belief, this faith which we know little about but she is using science to prove her faith and so David likes the the film Lawrence of Arabiaand so David would be comparing her to Lawrence of that film, having a clear vision and going to get tto it no matter what.
(âŚ)
Noomi understanding was that David was not supposed to have his own agenda and when Noomi was being Elizabeth, she would have to correct herself and remind herself that David was a robot, a computer and then at one point in the movie, she would feel this huge rage, and anger towards him and then remind herself that he was a hard disk with no soul or emotions, and he wouldnât really understand her as a human who has a soul.
Elizabeth Shaw would be the heart and soul in and David the brains, and they could be a good team.
Fassbender agreed with this point of view although he saw his character as a hard arse/ass rather than a hard discâ
I personally find interesting how David compared Elizabeth to the Lawrence of Arabia of his favorite movie. The same character he hidentifies himself with (but in his situation mostly for âRomanticâ resosns: because they both, David and Lawrence, are different from anyone else, are âstrangersâ, because of their isolation, because they both feel special, not ordinary men). I wrote about the parallels between Elizabeth and Lawrence here: https://gothic-fiction-in-space.tumblr.com/post/169015685863/gothic-fiction-in-space-why-david-has-fallen-inÂ
Elizabeth put David back together, during their journey to the Engineersâ planet, because she pitied him, in the end, but also because she has never really seen David as a person worth of her resentment, worth of her anger. Davis was a computer in human form to her, someone was programmed to be amoral and dangerous, not because he really was dangerous and cruel by his choice. Fassbender knew better when he saiod that to him, David was more a âhard arseâ rather than an âhard discâ, I think.
Maybe thatâs why Daniels, in Alien: Covenant, is the only one that doubts of David, the only one that doesnât trust David: because she is used to look at synthetics as people, and so, she put more attention to their behavior. Daniels is always trying to âhumanizeâ Walter during Alien: Covenant, especially in the deleted scenes. We know, thanks to some interviews, that Danielsâ best friends, her favorite people, even before the events of Covenant movie, are Tennesse, Faris, and Walter: a synthetic out of all the humans of the crew. Daniels doesnât allow Walter to say he âthinks about everythingâ and helps her only because heâs programmed to do that, only because itâs his duty: Daniels gives value to Walterâs âkindnessâ. When Walter sees David and gets a little struck by the realization he (Walter) is only a copy of someone else, a copy of David, that there are âothersâ like him, Daniels try to make him look at David as a âdistant relativeâ, she tries to âhumanizeâ him, to give value to his âuniquenessâ, even if Walter sees David more as a âdistant meâ. Daniels smiles a bit while sheâs comparing Walter and David to two relatives: sheâs trying to be kind and warm even in that gruesome situation.
David: ââŚand then the humans left the poor robot behind to clean up their mess and went on a cruise.â Walter: âThat doesnât sound like something that really happened.â David: âWell, it did.â Walter: âIt sounds more like the plot of
WALL¡E.â David: âAre you calling me a liar in my own cave???â