Ex Machina (FILM REVIEW)
Ex Machina
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Computer Nerd Falls
for Fembot with Free Will in Intriguing Sci-Fi Thriller
Caleb
Smith (Domnhall Gleeson) works as a computer programmer for Blue Book, the most
popular internet search engine in the world. As the winner of a staff lottery,
he is summoned to the secluded, hilltop retreat of the company’s reclusive CEO,
Nathan Bateman (Oscar Isaac).
Only after being brought there by corporate helicopter does the nerdy
26 year-old discover that his billionaire boss has a hidden agenda. As it turns
out, the place is less a home than a high-tech facility dedicated to conducting
research in artificial intelligence.
But before Caleb is allowed to stay, he’s forced to sign a
non-disclosure agreement promising to keep secret what he’s about to witness. Nathan
next explains that it’s an invention, an android he wants Turing tested,
meaning examined for any software flaws revealing it as non-human.
He then introduces his curious guest to Ava (Alicia Vikander), the
fetching fembot he wants studied over the course of a week. Caleb is surprised by
her level of sophistication, since her brain is complex enough to discern the
connotation of idioms like “breaking the ice.” He’s even more impressed by her
non-deterministic nature, as she appears to have been successfully programmed
with free will.
The plot thickens several days into the project when Ava senses
Caleb has developed feelings for her. At that point, the attractive automaton quietly
confides her fears about being expendable in the eyes of Nathan who wouldn’t
have a second thought about wiping her memory banks clean once she’s no longer considered
state-of-the-art. After all, that’s what he’s done to each of her mothballed predecessors
in his relentless quest to build a better cyborg.
Where does Caleb’s loyalty lie? With the callous employer he
suddenly sees as a heartless tinkerer? Or with the flesh-covered machine exhibiting
a full range of emotions, including a seductive vulnerability? That is the
dilemma confronting the anguished protagonist in Ex Machina, an intriguing
sci-fi adventure marking the splendid directorial debut of Alex Garland.
Best known as the scriptwriter of 28 Days Later, the gifted Brit more
than proves his mettle as a filmmaker, here, with a thought-provoking thriller
guaranteed to keep you enthralled while reassessing the meaning of
consciousness.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R
for profanity, violence, sexual references and graphic nudity
Running time: 108 minutes
Distributor: A24
To see a trailer Ex
Machina, visit: http://exmachina-movie.com/trailer
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