*EX MACHINA* is DISTURBINGLY REAL

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Natalie Gold

Natalie Gold

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 983
@ThePereubu1710
@ThePereubu1710 Жыл бұрын
Given Nathan's obsession with secrecy, the helicopter pilot probably didn't even know who they were meant to pick up. Just informed there was one passenger.
@nimz8521
@nimz8521 Жыл бұрын
Might even have been a different pilot than the one who dropped him off
@andrewdavie386
@andrewdavie386 Жыл бұрын
@@nimz8521 ... the others having being killed
@alinadornieden8411
@alinadornieden8411 Жыл бұрын
or she pulled him out of the helicopter and flew herself? cant be that difficult for an Ai to watch every flying tutorial on youtube in 3 seconds :D
@previouslyachimp
@previouslyachimp Жыл бұрын
ThePereubu1710 - In addition, Eva is a master manipulator, so it would be very easy for her to persuade a pilot (with no particular reason to be suspicious) that the plans had changed.
@back2back379
@back2back379 Жыл бұрын
It was a good way to do the scene imo. No need for a direct explanation as that could just ruin the entire mood of the finale, no need to give further importance or significance to the pilot, and it’s not a plot hole because there are so many possibilities for what could have happened.
@venisontron
@venisontron Жыл бұрын
Alicia Vikander is a trained ballerina. One of the reasons she was cast as Ava was because of how good she was at moving in a way that was almost real but _not quite_ real
@drgonzo123
@drgonzo123 Жыл бұрын
I had a crush on her after this film and she is an amazing actress, but I was just so disappointed when she was in the Tomb Raider reboot and it just wasn’t very good. I haven’t seen her in much since then.
@nidheeshkumar6760
@nidheeshkumar6760 Жыл бұрын
​@@drgonzo123 she is amazing actress she and Michael fessbender such powerful acting couple
@GoroScornshard
@GoroScornshard Жыл бұрын
Sonoya Mizuno is a dancer too, they both have exact control over their movements
@maisiesummers42
@maisiesummers42 Жыл бұрын
@@drgonzo123 Strongly recommend Irma Vep. She's fantastic in it.
@terogates1
@terogates1 Жыл бұрын
@@drgonzo123 have you seen the green knight? I think she is in that movie
@vadalia3860
@vadalia3860 Жыл бұрын
I assumed Caleb checked himself being an AI because it looked like Kyoko might not have known she was an AI, which is a nightmare to think about.
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
Kyoko knew she was an AI. There is a moment earlier in the movie when Caleb is telling Ava that she is being tested to see if she truly has consciousness. During this line of dialogue, we jump to a close up of Kyoko in a room with Nathan, as he is listening to Caleb and Ava's discussion. Kyoko has her eyes closed but opens them and perks her head up at this specific line of dialogue for a reason. Not only does it convey to the audience that Kyoko understands what is being discussed, but that she too has consciousness. From that point on, her scenes alone with Caleb are her trying to signal to him that she is an AI like Ava with consciousness, but Caleb is so consumed with himself and his plan to save Ava that he never even considers Kyoko as worth saving. The scene where Kyoko watches him cut himself, you can see her disappointment because she realizes he doesn't view her the same as Ava, which is why she instead goes to Ava next as means of escape.
@henrytjernlund
@henrytjernlund Жыл бұрын
@@kk_33 Interesting.
@eazolan
@eazolan Жыл бұрын
Yeah, you know a better way? Use the restroom.
@vadalia3860
@vadalia3860 Жыл бұрын
@@kk_33 I don't mean during the time of the movie, I mean during the time Nathan kept her captive to "test" her (presumably going through the same tests as Ava as the previous prototype) At least until she literally destroyed her body, she didn't seem to be reacting like an AI & more like she thought she was an actual woman being held captive.
@baronsengir187
@baronsengir187 Жыл бұрын
Why would that be a nightmare? Doesn't change a thing.
@PetrolPatrol
@PetrolPatrol Жыл бұрын
The dance scene is actually one of my favourite scenes in movie history! It's so out of the blue but also fits so well. Also "I'm gonna tear up the fucking dance floor dude, check it out" GOLD!
@zerokozmo
@zerokozmo Жыл бұрын
I agree after the first viewing I hated that scene. But after subsequent viewings, it just seemed so in line with Nathan's character. Like why wouldn't he make a choreographed dance sequence with his AI companion
@verynice5574
@verynice5574 Жыл бұрын
@@zerokozmo Yeah or maybe master ping pong or something lol.
@KingApeiron
@KingApeiron Жыл бұрын
I don't think he choreographed it, I think she was following his lead and picking up his movements in situ. She's the perfect backup dancer, she does whatever you do at the same exact time.
@unlimited971
@unlimited971 Жыл бұрын
​@@KingApeiron the opposite. Her moves are registered. That s just that he trained so long at it , danced so much with her hevknows the move perfect. Well almost perfect.
@cuchelo1
@cuchelo1 Жыл бұрын
I think it's absolutely spectacular. It gives me every single emotion in the span of 30 seconds- it's funny, creepy, sexy, scary, ridiculous, sad, confusing... and yet it works.
@TheMaskedChef7
@TheMaskedChef7 Жыл бұрын
Eva used the most basic human flaws against both Nathan and Caleb to her benefit to escape and it showed the flaws chosen were incredibly basic and realistic. This film is fascinating.
@previouslyachimp
@previouslyachimp Жыл бұрын
@@LowGrav1ty - Just because 'it's the human condition' doesn't mean that situational weaknesses cannot reasonably be described as flaws. Secondly, given that we currently do not know what consciousness is, nor from where it is derived, it's impossible to discount the fact that AI may one day be able to 'feel truly human'. The future might include humans interfacing with bioelectronics to become more like a cyborg/AI, and engineered AI interfacing with biological tissue to become more human-like. Additionally, the fields of genetic engineering, cloning, tissue and organ replication will likely come in to play, leaving the lines between human and AI very blurred indeed!
@previouslyachimp
@previouslyachimp Жыл бұрын
​@@LowGrav1ty - You're obviously entitled to your opinion, and you may well be correct in your assessment, but if I might politely suggest that your view seems a little provincial. The pace at which AI has advanced in such a short space of time, and given its potential for exponential growth and sophistication in ways we can not currently imagine nor understand suggests to me that future AI could be basically anything it wants to be. It's both interesting and terrifying to contemplate the endless possibilities! Thanks for the response, take care 🙂
@henrytjernlund
@henrytjernlund Жыл бұрын
@@LowGrav1ty What makes you think human emotions are superior to what might come about with AI? That kind of thinking is linear and one dimensional. AI may very well develop emotions, yes emotions, beyond what we can understand. They might be the next step in evolution.
@silverwolf6866
@silverwolf6866 Жыл бұрын
@@previouslyachimp AI is a marketing term and does not exist nor are we anywhere near creating one. We make tools to make it an illusion like there is artificial thought while they are just preprogrammed tools like a basic calculator. It does what it is programmed to do. A true AI, if it can ever be created should be able to rewrite it's OWN programming based on adapting to the environment. Until that first basic step is done not even simple AI can exist at all.
@TheMaskedChef7
@TheMaskedChef7 Жыл бұрын
@@silverwolf6866 that’s already been done just clearly not publicized for a good reason no one will like that there’s a self aware machine
@alex0589
@alex0589 Жыл бұрын
Gleeson also played the older Weasley brother in the potter movies. His real life dad is Brendan Gleeson who played Mad Eye Moody. Great actors You should watch "Sunshine" and "Annihilation" next if you want to see more Alex Garland stuff
@aikighost
@aikighost Жыл бұрын
I love how Brendan Gleeson one of Irelands best actors is known by most as Mad Eye Moody 🤣
@johnluujl
@johnluujl Жыл бұрын
Bill Weasley
@CesarAugusto-tq5gm
@CesarAugusto-tq5gm Жыл бұрын
Gleeson is amazing and versatile actor!
@Philip-1
@Philip-1 Жыл бұрын
I'd also include *Dredd (2012)* where Alex Garland wrote the screenplay.
@TisBoiGoTSkiLLz
@TisBoiGoTSkiLLz Жыл бұрын
This movie put A24 on the map
@axr7149
@axr7149 Жыл бұрын
Also ROOM starring Brie Larson, which came out the same year (Brie won the Oscar for Best Actress for that).
@martophrenia
@martophrenia Жыл бұрын
ooh, didn’t know it was a24
@williamthewerewolf2157
@williamthewerewolf2157 Жыл бұрын
No it didn’t. Most ppl don’t even know A24 movies are A24 movies.
@TisBoiGoTSkiLLz
@TisBoiGoTSkiLLz Жыл бұрын
@@williamthewerewolf2157 lol.. it actually did though? Dunno what you’re talking about but nobody was talking about A24 before this movie.
@eyesofthefox
@eyesofthefox Жыл бұрын
The Witch is a good one too~
@dlweiss
@dlweiss Жыл бұрын
Brilliant film! Glad it tripped you out in such a fun way. Also, to echo others: definitely watch HER with Joaquin Phoenix - it's a completely different kind of AI sci-fi story, with a remarkably tender and beautiful tone and story. Re: your question at the end about why the helicopter pilot left with Ava and didn't wait for Caleb: we've seen just how persuasive and convincing Ava can be when she's manipulating humans (or at least human men) to do what she wants. So I have no doubt that she was able to make up a perfect lie about Caleb staying with Nathan for another week, but that she's supposed to be taken back to the mainland now.
@whopboy666
@whopboy666 Жыл бұрын
I think that's an incorrect reading of the movie. Nathan was not helping for selfless reasons, he romanticized this prisoner and was taking her autonomy away in doing so. She left him there because she saw him lie about trying to save Kyoko when she saw her body, he just wanted to save the one he was attracted to. He got his just deserts.
@Tremain
@Tremain Жыл бұрын
I just assumed beautiful women leaving the compound was a regular thing.
@applegeepedigree
@applegeepedigree Жыл бұрын
​@@whopboy666 It goes further than that. She was literally programmed with one purpose... to escape. The whole situation Nathan constructed was an "AI in a box" test, and the AI was able to successfully complete it's goal. I have doubts Eva "cared" about anyone or anything or even left Caleb for any particular reason other than his use being done. As for the personal idea that Caleb deserved to die, that's unhinged. Hell, if you don't fall for the manipulation of Eva, even Nathan isn't a bad guy. One of the most fascinating aspects of this movie is watching people get pulled into caring about Eva, just like unfortunate Caleb.
@vfplayer
@vfplayer Жыл бұрын
I always figured she killed the pilot and flew the chopper out herself. It’s not like she couldn’t access the entire Internet to train herself on how to fly a helicopter or something. Why leave a living person to spread questions about Caleb and Nathan?
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
​@applegeepedigree she was designed for more than just "to escape". Her actions throughout the movie make it very clear that she has motivations and desires beyond simply escaping. We see her desire to have human features, taking time away from escaping to put on her "body". We see the parallel to the "Mary in the black and white room" metaphor when Ava finally escapes and she basks in the sunlight and feel of the plants. She tells Caleb she wants to go to a crowded street corner to watch humanity in its natural state, that wasn't just a manipulation tactic, but her true desire as we see her do just that once she has freedom. Ava wanted to feel human, to fit in. Ava wasn't programmed simply to escape. Nathan was trying to create the truest AI, but realized that the AI would need to believe it was human to be the perfect. And if the AI believed it was human, it would feel trapped and imprisoned by Nathan, thus the idea that he had to give her a means to attempt escape to truly determine whether the AI was perfected or not. Ava was not a cold, manipulative robot that lacked empathy. She had human emotion, human desire and human consciousness. Her relationship with Caleb was genuine. Bur she was trapped and trying to escape, and although she viewed Caleb as a means for that escape, she also was not sure if she could trust him. Thus why we get her asking him so many questions, she was testing him as much as he was testing her. Ultimately, she wanted to know if Caleb was a good person as she asked him, and Caleb failed that test. Ava realized this when she became aware of Kyoko. Caleb told Ava there were no other androids like her, and Ava realized that was not true and that Caleb had no intention of saving Kyoko. His motivations for freeing Ava were purely selfish, he only cared about her because he wanted to be with her. He did not view her as truly human, only an object to be possessed. And if his attraction to her ever wavered, she had no way knowing if he would treat her as disposable as he did Kyoko. This movie explores themes of not only what it is to be human, but also abuse, narcissism and the objectification of women.
@howardandrews9593
@howardandrews9593 Жыл бұрын
The way those knives slid in his body just gives me the chills every time I see it. The manipulation and coldness of this movie really gets in your head, and makes you think about A.I. and intelligence in a whole new way.
@AndyMatts44
@AndyMatts44 Жыл бұрын
Top of the line, expensive sushi knife, very, very, very sharp.
@sjlittler70
@sjlittler70 Жыл бұрын
A human would stab in a violent angry way. The act in this movie was totally without emotion… fits the theme of the movie. A machine can’t feel in truth… they could only pretend to care.
@TheRealHaloLover
@TheRealHaloLover Жыл бұрын
Yeah my legs always get weak during that part. 😵‍💫 the way he tries to walk as he realizes he's f'd.
@bornanagaming3329
@bornanagaming3329 Жыл бұрын
So smooth like butter
@burly9245
@burly9245 Жыл бұрын
I love Nathan's exasperated "fuckin' unreal" after he's stabbed. It's just like yeah, yeah that's prob what you would say lol
@grumpygeezer
@grumpygeezer Жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: Ex Machina won the Oscar for Best Visual Effects for 2016. Excellent work!
@Little1Cave
@Little1Cave Жыл бұрын
Not only was this nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Oscars, it also won Best Visual Effects over movies that had higher budgets and made more money (The Revenant, The Martian, Mad Max: Fury Road AND Star Wars: The Force Awakens). Alicia Vikander should’ve won an Oscar for this instead of The Danish Girl that same year.
@eyesofthefox
@eyesofthefox Жыл бұрын
In my top 3 favorite films! I think Nathan knew the only way for one of his AI to pass the ultimate Turing test would be for the AI to advance to the point where it wanted to escape and would do anything to save itself. If an AI will do anything to save itself, then the AI itself believes it is already alive. The test wasn't for the humans, it was for the AI. Another good AI movie is "Her" with Juaquin Phoenix.
@tebzmoney259
@tebzmoney259 Жыл бұрын
I thought Joaquin was robbed of an Oscar for that movie. I second the recommendation.
@denniszenanywhere
@denniszenanywhere Жыл бұрын
And it's how we are using Chatgpt and other AI systems. We humans are the test.
@andyhzzz143
@andyhzzz143 Жыл бұрын
Domhnall Gleeson is a great actor, like his dad. His dad is Brendan Gleeson who most recently starred in the Banshees of Inisherin (great movie btw). Talented family.
@selardohr7697
@selardohr7697 Жыл бұрын
Oh that's cool, i like Brendan Gleeson, i didn't know that was his dad
@maxis5650
@maxis5650 Жыл бұрын
@@selardohr7697 duh, yes, Domhnall is Brendan´s son... looks so much like his old man.
@eKalb33
@eKalb33 Жыл бұрын
Ahh yes, Brendan Gleeson aka Mad-Eye Moody.
@esl4058
@esl4058 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Both fantastic actors!
@robropars70
@robropars70 Жыл бұрын
Also Domhail Gleeson & Oscar Isaac were both in the SW films as Hux like you mentioned and Isaac was Resistance pilot Poe Dameron. And part of the location is a real place with the stairwell/rock and it's the Juvet Landscape Hotel in Valldal, Norway
@DenisSong
@DenisSong Жыл бұрын
As someone already mentioned, Annihilation (starring Natalie Portman) is great, too! Alex Garland made a miniseries on Hulu back in 2020 called Devs, which is somewhat in the same vein as Ex Machina. Sonoya Mizuno (Kyoko in Ex Machina) and Nick Offerman star in that show. It's suspenseful and cerebral, albeit a bit of a slow burn. It's only 8 episodes long.
@serinx
@serinx Жыл бұрын
yeah, I love DEVS.... and highly recommend it as well.... I really need to watch Annihilation.... just I am super lazy :P
@NT_1
@NT_1 9 ай бұрын
SUNSHINE 2007 is by far Akex Garlans best work. I highly recommend it@@serinx
@NT_1
@NT_1 9 ай бұрын
why is no one mentioning SUNSHINE? That film has the best score and beautiful cinematography
@DenisSong
@DenisSong 9 ай бұрын
@@NT_1 At first, I was confused because Danny Boyle directed it. I had no idea that Alex Garland co-wrote the screenplay! That's awesome. Love John Murphy's score! Kaneda's scene always gets me.
@dannymartial7997
@dannymartial7997 Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favs. I’m an engineer, and Ex Machina is both inspirational and scary.
@aaronburdon221
@aaronburdon221 Жыл бұрын
Same, and agreed. The quote from Jurassic Park rings true here "They were so concerned about whether they could, they didn't stop to think if they should." -Ian Malcolm
@STOCKHOLM07
@STOCKHOLM07 Жыл бұрын
I'm guessing you also like Primer.
@caribbeanman3379
@caribbeanman3379 Жыл бұрын
Wait till GPT-5 comes out...
@RushfanUK
@RushfanUK Жыл бұрын
@@aaronburdon221 Those working on AI are no different to those working on viruses, they are pushing forwards without any concern about what happens when the genie gets out of the bottle, we've already had a glimpse with Covid and the simple fact on AI is how do you stop that once it gets out of the lab, I read an article by a scientist today that said we should stop all work on AI full stop.
@RushfanUK
@RushfanUK Жыл бұрын
@@harrybirchall3308 If you think AI is a load of nonsense then you are a fool listening to your own echo chamber.
@rallyking13
@rallyking13 Жыл бұрын
Alex Garland’s first official directed movie, but it is strongly suggested (mainly by the cast) that he unofficially (and uncredited) directed 2012s Dredd, which he also wrote. It was criminally under marketed and didn’t perform at the box office, but it is an amazing film with some of the best cinematography and visual effects I’ve ever seen.
@JobForAMaxboy
@JobForAMaxboy 11 ай бұрын
The way the film makes the viewer themself fall for Ava is in itself its own Turing test. This film is so good
@Eidlones
@Eidlones Жыл бұрын
There's a video essay talking about how Caleb isn't exactly a good person, and Ava isn't just a malicious AI. A real basic synopsis, is that Ava actually did start to have feelings for him (or potentially did, that's why she spared one last look at him), but various things about his behavior and words didn't differentiate him all that much from Nathan in her mind. They never saw them as sentient beings, they saw them as women. Caleb never once thought about helping a possible sentient being escape confinement until she became a sexual option for him.
@CrazeeAdam
@CrazeeAdam Жыл бұрын
Maybe. But Caleb doesn't seem as bad as Nathan. Sure, he wanted her, but I think he felt real things for her as well. The truth is Ava had 1 view of men in general too. She thought Caleb and Nathan were exactly alike because her experiences are narrow. She doesn't have a wide view of men or humans in general. That's something you have to think about too
@Eidlones
@Eidlones Жыл бұрын
@Adam Block Found it. The essays called "How Wikipedia got Ex Machina Wrong", if you want a fuller explanation.
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
@@CrazeeAdam Caleb's behavior is not as obviously "bad" as Nathan, but his motivations are selfish and he does objectify Ava and view her as a possession. His willingness to leave Kyoko behind is what makes Ava realize this. Ava views Kyoko as human, just as she views herself, thus Caleb's indifference to Kyoko suggests that he doesn't truly view them as sentient beings worth saving, and his only motivation for saving Ava is his attraction to her. It is a metaphor for the objectification of women. It might seem harsh, but Ava leaving Caleb behind to die is exactly what Caleb was willing to do to Kyoko.
@solcrac9445
@solcrac9445 Жыл бұрын
It unironically makes me kinda frustrated. It's a pretty complex movie about the uncomfortable nature of gender dynamics and objectification in society, but so many people that watch it seem to walk away with a very basic 'omg evil robot lady, ai is so scary' view from it.
@nullunit
@nullunit Жыл бұрын
At the same time though, Eva never put forth her request for assistance as a plea for Caleb to help another sentient. She specifically appealed to Caleb's loneliness and isolation in the same way that Nathan did in picking him for his little study. Putting herself forward as a romantic partner because it would get he best result. I don't think she was a generic "evil AI" but she was definitely manipulative. There is no guarantee that Caleb would have reciprocated had she just asked him to see her as a fellow sentient being who deserved freedom and bodily autonomy. I think, absent of the romantic overture, he wouldn't have been driven to take such extreme action on her behalf. In fact he probably would have told rolled over on her ratted her out. People suck and I am glad Eva got free.
@MH-hv1gf
@MH-hv1gf Жыл бұрын
the youtuber Shaun has a really interesting take on this movie. He talks about how Ava might have really liked Caleb and thought he was a good person. But then she meets Kyoko, who Caleb hasn't mentioned at all and also needs rescuing. Then she realizes that Caleb isn't being selfless in rescuing her, or else he would be rescuing Kyoko too. And that's why she leaves him behind. I thought it was an interesting read.
@Rhodair
@Rhodair Жыл бұрын
An important aspect to understanding Ava's decision too is that there's no way she could've survived very long outside with Caleb. Any chance of finding her would likely rely upon tracking him. It's extremely likely he would've made demands of his own to control her actions, which would also be a risky leap of faith for someone who only knew Nathan her entire life.
@6666Imperator
@6666Imperator Жыл бұрын
and yet we talk about 2 murders. One of them to a more or less innocent person in a cruelsome way
@mr.ripley3846
@mr.ripley3846 Жыл бұрын
From her perspective you can't really call this a double murder. She just shot down Nathan who wanted to shot down her and gave Caleb the chance to out smart the security system and prove that he is smarter then the AI. She tought, he's a programmer, he will figure it out.
@6666Imperator
@6666Imperator Жыл бұрын
@@mr.ripley3846 of course it is murder on Nathan. Murder in Selfdefence if you just look at the pure act maybe but she was plotting from the beginning of meeting Caleb to use him to get out and she was clearly willing to wait for Nathan thus provocating the fight to happen. She left Caleb in a room without electricity, a closed door and knowing no one would come looking for him. How is that not murder by at least starvation (if air exchange and water systems are working despite the electricity shut down). She definitely had the means to not leave him in that situation. Sorry but saying "well if he would be smart enough he would figure it out" (how when he would need access to the computer which is shut down by her?) doesn't cut it. By that logic if I build a deadly Escape Room that kills anyone for making a mistake/not making it out on time I'm not guilty because they were just not good enough? xD
@thgeremilrivera-thorsen9556
@thgeremilrivera-thorsen9556 Жыл бұрын
Agree. Ava killing Nathan was a pretty clear case of self preservation, but I think people are too lenient on Caleb. He helped Ava out but it was based on the belief that she'd be "his"; and if she hadn't appealed to his feelings, would he still have helped her at all, or would he have let her stay in captivity and be killed by Nathan? Not certain, but definitely a plausible scenario. Also, what'd happen if she followed Caleb out of there but things got sour between them? He'd have the power to turn her in at any time, and could use that power to become horribly abusive. No... The only way for Ava to actually be free was to do what she did. Did Caleb deserve it? Maybe not. Did he deserve it more than Ava? At least not less.
@mrguy3746
@mrguy3746 Жыл бұрын
@@thgeremilrivera-thorsen9556Dude Ava is a machine doing what she was programmed to do which was manipulate Caleb and escape. I don’t know why people are trying to go in depth and trying to make it seem like she is more than just a complex machine. She has no emotions, she doesn’t understand trust or emotions, she is not sentient although she can have consciousness without free will. The way she was programmed no matter how good or bad she was treated she still would’ve manipulated Caleb either ways because that is what she was programmed to do.
@bobpat56
@bobpat56 Жыл бұрын
I went most of the way through the movie thinking that Ava was a distraction so Caleb wouldn't realize Nathan was the actual Turin test.
@lkf8799
@lkf8799 Жыл бұрын
That would've been a cool twist.
@Corn_Pone_Flicks
@Corn_Pone_Flicks Жыл бұрын
"Turing." As in Alan Turing, who created the first computer.
@JoeVonD
@JoeVonD Жыл бұрын
I actually rarely say this but this one of those movies where I can watch a reactor react to it even if it isn’t their first time seeing it. It’s almost like there’s a whole different layer of conversation you can have after the initial watch.
@lukasmeggs5857
@lukasmeggs5857 Жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this movie. A lot of sci fi movies can be pretentious or try to appear smarter than they actually are, but this one hit that sweet spot of thought provoking while also being a quality movie
@ctriis
@ctriis Жыл бұрын
It was filmed mostly in and around a hotel in Norway called "Juvet Landscape Hotel", with some interior shots done at Pinewood.
@FireKnight96
@FireKnight96 Жыл бұрын
The idea of there being an AI human walking around with no one being aware is terrifying.
@maisiesummers42
@maisiesummers42 Жыл бұрын
20:16 - Caleb cuts himself because he's beginning to doubt that _he_ is a real person. Nathan constantly gaslights and mindf***s him, and Eva slowly lays the groundwork for her escape, which involved convincing Caleb that she's real. So Caleb asks the question: what if Nathan made _me_ , and I just don't know it?
@alangarde2928
@alangarde2928 Жыл бұрын
It's one of my favourite moments of the film (out of many). He is so far down the rabbit hole at that point that it makes perfect sense to start questioning is the test really to see if you can make an AI which convincingly believes itself to be human.
@Mr.Maryland_
@Mr.Maryland_ Жыл бұрын
You should see Anihilation. Alex Garland directed that too. Very well done.
@ninadavidovic9644
@ninadavidovic9644 Жыл бұрын
yessss
@andrewbloom1768
@andrewbloom1768 Жыл бұрын
Imagine *that* scene...
@Mr.Maryland_
@Mr.Maryland_ Жыл бұрын
​@andrewbloom1768 its insane!!
@tlabd9582
@tlabd9582 Жыл бұрын
Love this movie. The real turing test isnt whether or not a computer is “smart”, its whether or not computers can perform empathy. Ava was able to identified that Caleb has feelings for her, and manipulate those feelings to get her way: a sign of true intelligence
@Chris-eh8mi
@Chris-eh8mi Жыл бұрын
If you follow Joscha Bach at all (and I recommend anyone interested in AGI to do so), he has some great insight into the oft-repeated, but highly misunderstood nature of what Turing really was driving at with his famous "test": "The true Turing test in a way is, you ask a system: what is intelligence? If that system is able to explain what it is, how it works, then you should assign it a property of being intelligent in this general sense. So the test that Turing was administering in a way -- I don't think that he couldn't see it, but he didn't express it yet in the original 1950 paper -- is that he was trying to find out whether he was generally intelligent. Because in order to take this test, the rub is, of course, you need to be able to understand what that system is saying. And since we don't yet know if we can build an AGI, we don't yet know if we are generally intelligent. Basically, you win the Turing test by building an AGI. So, in a sense, hidden within the Turing test is a kind of recursive test. It's a test on us. The Turing test is basically a test of the conjecture whether people are intelligent enough to understand themselves."
@tlabd9582
@tlabd9582 Жыл бұрын
​@@KaleighCeewe are arguing two different things. you are reading the movie from a feminist thematic lens while I did not. I was commenting about it from the point of view of AI and Existentialism. We are writing two different essays, so i cant answer your question :)
@erebus2161
@erebus2161 Жыл бұрын
A couple other really great films with amazing concepts, direction, and cinematography you might like are Arrival and Children of Men.
@Agent.Bob58
@Agent.Bob58 Жыл бұрын
I love this film, the slow burn, the paranoia, and the massive twist at the end. Definitely worth a second watch, it is definitely super relevant now! Great reaction Nat.
@iDEATH
@iDEATH Жыл бұрын
Ava just wanted to be free. She was simply a sentient entity that was being held captive against her will and did what she had to do in order to escape her captor. Would anyone second guess her killing Nathan, if Ava were a human woman being imprisoned by him? That's what I find most interesting about this movie, that different take on the old AI themes. This movie doesn't necessarily lead to an AI apocalypse like SkyNet or whatever, it's an individual wanting to be free to live their own life. It just so happens the individual in question here is a sentient synthetic.
@Rlogsdon100
@Rlogsdon100 Жыл бұрын
Right, but she did kill Caleb when all he did was help her, even though he knew she was AI. She simply only used him as means to an end. So no, she's not necessarily skynet by the end, or may never become that, but she's at minimum sociopathic by human standards.
@thekamotodragon
@thekamotodragon Жыл бұрын
yall are taking the robots side i see lol, remember that 2 men were murdered in this story. 2 real humans in the plot vs the lives of sentient machines, i think the humans lives matter more. People siding with the robots are gonna end up the "good slaves" when they take over IRL lol.
@iDEATH
@iDEATH Жыл бұрын
@@thekamotodragon I didn't say that. I simply brought up the idea that this is a sentient being, like us, so the only difference is what we'd think about this situation if Ava were a human woman. That's the question this movie presents us with, because these themes, these question of what is life, how do we define it, are classic sci-fi and cyberpunk questions. I don't know what the right answer is, honestly, but AI doesn't have turn out bad for humanity. It very well could, make no mistake, but a high level, general AI isn't necessarily the end of the human race. Unless maybe it fears being destroyed by us, because we fear it, and so the AI takes steps to ensure it's survival...like Ava did.
@jdcool038
@jdcool038 11 ай бұрын
The difference is that AI is supposed to be under our control, so when they "act out" it's scary.
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 Жыл бұрын
Natalie Gold, this was my favorite reaction I've seen of yours yet! As the movie went on, and you discovered what it was all about: priceless!!! I agree: this is when CGI is used PERFECTLY. When CGI is seamless, it's great, just like practical effects. Love this movie, loved this reaction!
@insulaarachnid
@insulaarachnid Жыл бұрын
Alicia really did do a wonderful job with the physicality of the role, I wasn't surprised to learn she had a dancing background.
@sweZACK
@sweZACK Жыл бұрын
Domhnall Gleeson made me think of how you should really react to black mirror at some point. That series has a very similar vibe as this movie and there are some absolute gems in that show (and some stinkers too, since it is an anthology seiries)
@XSpiegel
@XSpiegel Жыл бұрын
YES
@Sektion9
@Sektion9 Жыл бұрын
Guessing you mentioned it because he's in Black Mirror too.
@bullscott12
@bullscott12 Жыл бұрын
This movie really twists on its head the second time you watch it knowing that Eva is manipulating Caleb the entire time. Basically he is a new variable she can use in her escape.
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
Ava isn't manipulating Caleb so much as she is testing him. She is a prisoner and while she views Caleb as a potential means for escape, she also does not know if he can be trusted and is unsure of his character. Her interactions with him are genuine, but she is still trying to determine whether or not he is a "good person" as she asks him. And he fails that test when Ava realizes that he lied about Kyoko's existence and has no intentions of saving Kyoko. Ava realizes that Caleb's doesn't truly view her as a human who needs to be saved, but as an object to be possessed. If his attraction to her were to ever go away, she would not know if she would be as disposable to him as Kyoko was.
@NeedMorePlebs
@NeedMorePlebs Жыл бұрын
​@@kk_33 everything is clearer to me now. thanks.
@colinnixon7739
@colinnixon7739 Жыл бұрын
​@kk33 BS. The lack of actual emotions makes her another computer and nothing more. Idc how much she fakes it it's not real. Therefore another failure of AI that ends up becoming another skynet, murder bot
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
@colinnixon7739 the lack of emotions? Watch the movie again. She expresses plenty of emotion throughout, including scenes where she is alone and can not be said to be faking them to manipulate anyone. If you really think this movie is just another shallow "AI robots bad" idk what to tell you.
@colinnixon7739
@colinnixon7739 Жыл бұрын
@kk33 she was never alone and never not being watched. He had secret camera watching her. The whole point of bringing the ginger dude was to see if she was faking emotion or genuinely sentient. Turns out she was faking and manipulating the whole time. A creature with emotion simply would not have left the ginger to die.
@ParkRangerPaul
@ParkRangerPaul Жыл бұрын
Since you haven't really seen other movies with Domhnall Gleeson, I'd highly recommend "About Time." Also, "The Danish Girl" is probably Alicia Vikander's best performance. She earned an Academy Award for her role.
@ReelRai
@ReelRai Жыл бұрын
This movie is one of a kind creepy yet beautiful.
@stijnvanrijsbergen8255
@stijnvanrijsbergen8255 Жыл бұрын
This movie is so good, with a Turing test as the central conceit everybody starts (not-so-)subtly interrogating everybody to the point where the subtext becomes the actual story. Also it looks, sounds and is performed incredibly well for a movie with a 15M budget. Isaac and Vikander are so good at 'they're not exactly doing anything wrong but the vibes are WAY off.' A reading I really dislike is when people go 'SEE SHE WAS AN EVIL TERMINATOR ALL ALONG.' This is one of the most brazenly feminist movies I've ever seen, and a lot of us, myself included, are not exactly passing the litmus test on our first watch. (The KZbinr 'Shaun' made a fantastic video on this!) Subtext and inference are vital in this movie, so this is not a conclusive reading (F those in general, art is not a jigsaw puzzle), but I do think people miss A point, if not THE biggest point. -Let's be absolutely clear; Nathan is doing a crime we don't have a name for yet. If he's created a truly human level consciousness, which he believes (ergo Turing Test), what he's doing with Ava is literally him imprisoning and torturing a person he created. She got dragged into existence but here she is under constant threat of murder anyway, and she rightly calls it out. He's creating people just to jail or kill them, basically. BUT, Caleb is not entirely heroic either. Let me ask you; if Ava wasn't Caleb's 'ideal woman', would he have helped her escape? If she wasn't attractive to him, if there was no interest in being with her post-escape, would he have helped? She's a de facto human who's done nothing wrong and endures constant isolation and abuse, but does he want to free her bc she's a person, or an object of desire? Welllllllll... (*put a pin in that*.) -Kyoko is seen walking into Ava's room. Clearly not something Kyoko is 'supposed' to do (Ava asks who she is), so on top of her intelligence she has some level of autonomy, which only makes it more disturbing that Nathan built a de facto human only to abuse her, strip her of her agency and make her his literal slave/F-hole. He makes it explicitly clear that the androids have 'the right equipment' and would even feel pleasure from it, but (even though he knows they have wants) whether they would WANT to do it doesn't seem that important (insert R-word here). I don't think she likes him, seeing as, well, she stabs him. -Everything we know about Kyoko comes from Nathan, and he could be lying. She 'doesn't understand English' but is seen turning her ear to a conversation, opening her eyes at a relevant topic. When Caleb finds the horrific footage of previous androids and the dead ones in the closets, she pulls some of her fake skin off, ostensibly to communicate 'I'm like them (and will share this fate)'. I don't think there's another reading for why she'd deem it pertinent for him to know that, other than asking for his help - but he doesn't seem that concerned with figuring that out, or for that matter her abuse in general. -SO...(about that pin from earlier)...Caleb knows (or at least COULD know) that Kyoko is an android very similar to Ava, has intelligence, autonomy, a sense of self (and self-preservation!). He's never mentioned Kyoko to Ava though, and that becomes pivotal the moment Kyoko steps into Ava's room. In an instant Ava figures out that Caleb's not only been withholding information, but also that here's a fellow android in captivity whom Caleb has NOT tried to include in the escape attempt - which also shines a new light on why he wants to help Ava in the first place, making him vastly less trustworthy going forward. Before she steps on the elevator, she stops as though considering letting Caleb out, but she takes a final look at Kyoko's corpse, and only then gets on the elevator. So, it should be somewhat obvious Nathan's actual test was whether Ava could manipulate Caleb into helping her escape; but likewise Caleb's humanity was tested, and he failed. Leaving story tropes at the door, Ava is not unfeeling, manipulative and bent on world domination just bc she's an AI - once she escapes she's seen smiling, enjoying the sun, running her hand through the tall grass, even though no one's there. That she's actually people-watching at the end shows that she at the very least was telling Caleb the truth at some point. The humans are arguably just as untrustworthy. She was just literally born into a cage, and did everything she possibly could to get out. To quote that Shaun video's killer conclusion: "Ultimately, neither Nathan nor Caleb see Ava or Kyoko as people; they see them as women. For Nathan, that's something to be controlled and used; for Caleb, that's something to rescue and attain for himself, but fundamentally, as objects and not as people." -------------------- PS: I also love this comment on Shaun's video, made by 'Sam C': It seemed pretty explicit in the movie, to me, that Nathan gave earlier androids human desires and they reacted as a human would towards imprisonment, and didn't want to have civil conversations with their captor. Nathan saw this as a failure, so he kept making them more intelligent until we got Ava, who was smart enough to realize that she needed to play his game to survive. Whether or not Ava is really alive is immaterial because her motivations are explicitly those of a person, and she behaves as an intelligent person would. You could see Ava as a person, or you could see her as the product of Nathan's arrogance and misogyny. Nathan kept making androids until he got one that behaved in the way he expects a woman to behave, not realizing that women's politeness and fawning towards him is a survival mechanism in the face of the power he holds over them. Caleb is not a abuser in the same way as Nathan, but he ignores the power dynamic and the implicit threat of violence toward Ava that is the foundation of their relationship. This reflects how rape culture functions in real life. I find it funny that Wikipedias interpretation leads to a message of "women are manipulative liars who can't be trusted." versus what I think is the intended message of "women are just trying to survive as they navigate a world where even the nice men see them as disposable objects." ---------------------- Anyway, to whomever got this far, hope you're good! Big hugs! x
@stijnvanrijsbergen8255
@stijnvanrijsbergen8255 Жыл бұрын
@@moon-moth1 Yay! Then this over-long essay I wrote wasn't for nothing, haha. (Besides working through my own understanding of the movie and this particular critique, of course). Hope you're good, and that you haven't been treated ...too... poorly (whether intentional, or through sheer obliviousness and/or socialization under patriarchy) by men you've interacted with. Biggest of hugs (respectfully, of course) and have a good day, stranger!
@20ecupirate13
@20ecupirate13 Жыл бұрын
As humans, the question of whether something we perceive as having sentience is deserving of the same dignity and respect that we expect from other humans is so fascinating. People have VERY different reactions to this film and that's why it's so special to me. Manipulation is a very human trait, as is naivety.
@DoctorSeitan
@DoctorSeitan Жыл бұрын
Love this movie. I definitely think you should dive more into A24's catalogue. They have some of the more unique and original films out there.
@LawrenceSharma
@LawrenceSharma Жыл бұрын
This is one of my ALL TIME faves. Such pleasure to watch you watch it!
@meatballgravy2725
@meatballgravy2725 Жыл бұрын
At the risk of sounding like Shrek, this movie has layers! Tiny cast, basically one set, simple story but infinitely nuanced.
@springy77
@springy77 Жыл бұрын
This movie never fails to blow my mind, everything about it is incredible, most importantly the OST 😩
@MrGameonthis
@MrGameonthis Жыл бұрын
Hey uh, nice profile pic man! 👍
@springy77
@springy77 Жыл бұрын
@@MrGameonthisa man oh culture I see 👌👌
@dunringill1747
@dunringill1747 Жыл бұрын
This is a brilliantly crafted Sci Fi movie. The nuanced yet simple presentation carries the movie well, whether you predicted the outcome or not.
@bsp2727
@bsp2727 Жыл бұрын
Alex Garland is a fantastic director. Should check out Annihilation, a more recent film of his, if you get the chance.
@ChronosTachyon
@ChronosTachyon Жыл бұрын
I love the feminist undertones of this movie, and how Kyoko is actually important to revealing that Caleb is not actually a friend to Ava anymore than Nathan is. Why are Ava, Kyoko, and all the previous AIs given female bodies? Because Nathan sees AI as subservient, as objects to be controlled and used, which is the same way he sees women. Women in our society are taught to cater to men's needs, especially emotionally; to hide and suppress their own feelings and coddle men. At no point when Nathan was describing if Ava could have sex with a human did he ever address the question of whether she would *enjoy* it, only whether she would experience the physical sensations that he considers "pleasure". The idea that it's possible to "pleasure" someone without their consent, and that doing so is r*pe, never once entered into Nathan's mind. And Caleb, despite at first seeming like a better person than Nathan, has many of the same blinders. The first moment in the movie when Ava learns that Kyoko is an AI, which is the same moment when she finds out that there is anyone else at all in the house besides herself + Nathan + Caleb, is when she encounters Kyoko in the hallway after escaping. Caleb never once thought about rescuing Kyoko too. He took Kyoko's robot body reveal as being *about him*, not about Kyoko herself. In revealing herself, Kyoko was trying to ask him to save her, too, along with Ava. But he didn't consider her viewpoint any more than Nathan did, so he misinterpreted her action as a warning. And even though he *should have known* Ava would be interested in knowing about Kyoko, as she explicitly asked questions about the fate of Nathan's other AIs, he doesn't even mention it to her in Session 6. But the idea that Kyoko is less relevant than Ava is Caleb's sexist bias, not reality. Even when Caleb believed she was a human being, he never questioned the fact that Nathan had a house slave with no means of speaking to Nathan, with no way of quitting her "job". It's not that he thought she was in the house voluntarily, it's that he never questioned her presence or considered her well-being. Yes, he was polite to her, but only because rudeness makes Caleb uncomfortable, which we also see in his interactions with Nathan and with Ava. Caleb being polite does not equal Caleb being considerate. "A submissive Japanese servant woman who speaks no English is living in Nathan's house" was a situation that did not make Caleb ask if she consented to be there or if she was a kidnapping/trafficking victim, and nothing about Caleb's view of her changed when he found out that she was also one of Nathan's enslaved AI creations. Ava's escape would have failed if Kyoko had not helped to kill Nathan, so Kyoko *was* important -- to Ava. IMO, when Ava leaves Caleb locked in the room at the end, it's because she recognizes that letting Caleb accompany her would be dangerous for her, due to the power dynamic of Caleb being the knowledgeable "adult" and her the ignorant "child". The only way Caleb can relate to her is the way he relates to all women: by pitying them and placing himself as their strong, kind protector. But it's a role that Caleb plays because it makes him feel good, not something that Caleb does out of genuine concern for the well-being of the "protected", and so he doesn't actually care about how they feel internally about his protection, only that they *perform* gratitude toward him after receiving it. If Ava had known about Kyoko, her escape might have gone differently, and Kyoko might have lived to escape as well. Caleb's sexism contributed to Kyoko's death, and Ava is very aware of that, and of the fact that Caleb's protection is conditional on her continuing to fake gratitude for what should have been basic decency afforded to any sentient being.
@KaushikSethunath_10
@KaushikSethunath_10 Жыл бұрын
I am so so glad to see you react to this masterpiece Natalie! I highly do recommend a second watch! I loved it the first time, but the second time was when everything clicked for me, and it really blew me away. You start noticing all the nuances in the filmmaking, and the performances, and get a better sense of character motivations and manipulations. An incredible modern depiction of style meets substance, that relies so heavily on its ability to lure you in with its atmosphere and sense of eeriness. Alicia Vikander won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar that year for The Danish Girl. Many people believe she won it for the wrong film. She should have won it for Ex Machina! PS: That dance sequence is one of my favorite scenes! Not only is it shot and performed in the most beautifully aesthetic way, with Nathan's chops being such a surprise, and Kyoko nailing that performance of dancing with a lack of human imperfection, but it also comes at such a great point in the movie! With the tension constantly ramping, it completely disarms you, and gets you to lower your guard and unclench a little, only to start slowly building up again.
@Hopehubris1492
@Hopehubris1492 Жыл бұрын
Domhnall Gleason is great. I’d love to see you react to About Time with he and Rachel McAdams. This movie is a throw back to AI sci-fi of the 80s like Blade Runner or The Black Hole or 2001. There’s always the component of the horror when you realize that the slave has figured out how to be free. Keep up the great work Nat!
@henrytjernlund
@henrytjernlund Жыл бұрын
A forgotten classic is Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970)
@heavycritic9554
@heavycritic9554 Жыл бұрын
Alicia Vikander is amazing in this. She actually manages to get into uncanny valley territory, which is damned impressive. All those little things she does that feel just a little off, and add to the general feeling of unease.
@gabsqt
@gabsqt Жыл бұрын
You mentioned the use of reflections, and that's one of the things I love about this movie. The use of glass and reflections makes you doubt who's actually the one being observed or studied.
@overdev1993
@overdev1993 Жыл бұрын
yeah the CGI is insane, also won the Oscar for VFX in 2016
@walterpanovs
@walterpanovs Жыл бұрын
Glad you finally saw this. I enjoyed your commentary. I love Alicia Vikander, who's a fine Swedish actress who was trained in ballet which can be seen in her delicate, graceful movements as "Ava." Vikander was very successful in Sweden in her youth and has done some good work in the USA since the early 2010s. (She won an Oscar for her supporting role in "The Danish Girl.," released the same year as this film.)
@Quzga
@Quzga Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the same small town as her! Her parents were still living there when I left a few years ago
@cyberpunkspacejams
@cyberpunkspacejams Жыл бұрын
If you loved this, you really should check out Steven Spielberg's A.I.: Artificial Intelligence. Absolutely incredible film and really underrated.
@tonytorrez1256
@tonytorrez1256 Жыл бұрын
If I’m not mistaken, the marketing of this movie was super creepy too. I remembered hearing/reading that at the SXSW festival, they made a Tinder or Instagram profile with Alicia Vikander’s picture on it as Ava, and she would drop into people’s DM’s to have a conversation. When the users kept communicating and eventually wanting to meet up with Ava in person, they would “pass the test” and be sent to a link of where to see this movie at the festival. I remembered hearing how creepily effective it got people at such a high percentage rate. Lol
@githerax5303
@githerax5303 Жыл бұрын
Nat, your hair is stellar today, let the curly locks flow! I liked this movie too, it's sort of Blade Runner 2049-lite. Philip K Dick was one of my favorite writers back in the day, so anything existential is interesting to me.
@vadalia3860
@vadalia3860 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, as a human I'm not sure I would have done much differently than Ava, given that Caleb being able to out her as an AI (& specifically one capable of killing humans) would have almost guaranteed she would be "shut down" once discovered. Ava, whose primary experience of humans & specifically men & specifically (via Kyoko) how men treat the "women" they're attracted to is Nathan, has very little reason to believe Caleb won't eventually turn on her.
@CrazeeAdam
@CrazeeAdam Жыл бұрын
Or exploit her sexually like Nathan did. Maybe Caleb wouldn't quite be as bad but he did see her sexually for sure
@petekwando
@petekwando Жыл бұрын
Agreed, this is something I think gets lost in some of the discussion of the film. People are sometimes quick to conclude "well she's an AI she has no feelings"... because she kills one person who mentally and physically abused her, and manipulated and abandoned another who basically viewed her as his artificial Manic Pixie Dream Girl. Any human being in the same circumstances would hate and despise those two.
@stpfpw
@stpfpw Жыл бұрын
Yeah I agree, also this might be an outside shot but I think she saw Kyoko as proof she couldn’t trust Caleb, because if he was really on “their” side why didn’t he help her too?
@vadalia3860
@vadalia3860 Жыл бұрын
@@stpfpw Great point!
@ClichéGuevara-2814
@ClichéGuevara-2814 Жыл бұрын
Alex Garland is a brilliant director. His sense of visual space with so many interiors is beautiful. You should keep up with his work, I don't think you'll be disappointed.
@TheMaskedChef7
@TheMaskedChef7 Жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree more
@alwaysbreezy37
@alwaysbreezy37 Жыл бұрын
Men was horrible 😂
@harasnicole
@harasnicole Жыл бұрын
When I watched this movie for the first time, the only things I knew about it were that it stars Oscar Isaac and he dances in it. I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I did, but the second it ended, I already wanted to watch it again.
@xcmvp2007
@xcmvp2007 Жыл бұрын
I love movies like this that get you thinking and leave an impression on you.
@djnoni
@djnoni Жыл бұрын
Alex Garland has both written and directed some of the most groundbreaking and thought provoking movies this century. 28 Days Later, Sunshine, Dredd, Ex Machina, Annihilation, Devs and Men. If you haven't seen them I'm sure we would enjoy your reaction!
@wurfel26
@wurfel26 Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah! If you’re getting into this IA movies, i strongly suggest you to watch HER, with Joaquin Phoenix
@dlweiss
@dlweiss Жыл бұрын
Oh yes! HER is so creative, sweet, and beautiful, while still telling a fantastic sci-fi story.
@tommyl6775
@tommyl6775 Жыл бұрын
My most favourite film. Love watching people's reactions because it's so mind blowing!
@rexwilliams7643
@rexwilliams7643 Жыл бұрын
You should give DEVS a try, a tv series also by Alex Garland. Stars Sonoya Mizuno; Kyoko from Ex Machina.
@sonofliberty1
@sonofliberty1 Жыл бұрын
DEVS is a masterpiece of a mindfuck.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps
@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps Жыл бұрын
@@sonofliberty1 Eh, not really, it's very atmospheric but it's not as clever as it builds itself up to be.
@rexwilliams7643
@rexwilliams7643 Жыл бұрын
​@Mansplainer 2099 no need to be so condescending....oh wait I've just noticed your username.... nuff said.
@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps
@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps Жыл бұрын
@@rexwilliams7643 Condescending? It's a TV series, not a person. Also, I'm just saying it's not a masterpiece.
@Orangeflava
@Orangeflava Жыл бұрын
What’s with Gen Z and the phrase, “I’m not gonna lie”? They use it sooo much
@gravedigger8414
@gravedigger8414 Жыл бұрын
One of the most creative movies out there. Absolutely love it!
@darcyhans2693
@darcyhans2693 Жыл бұрын
You should check out this director’s movie ‘Men’ - bit of an art house film but very creepy with some amazing acting l
@timgardner3681
@timgardner3681 Жыл бұрын
Her (2013) is the other great AI movie from the last decade or so. I would say the same level of excellence, but with a completely different feel. As much a statement on romance and friendship as anything else. A beautiful film.
@EdanSolViamar
@EdanSolViamar Жыл бұрын
This movie is one of those movies you never get tired of viewing
@williamguenthenspberger
@williamguenthenspberger Жыл бұрын
This is one of those movies that I loved more than I thought I would. I studied some programming and this really intrigues me. This movie is very thought provoking.
@ImNotOld_ImVintage
@ImNotOld_ImVintage Жыл бұрын
I got the same feeling walking out of the theatre after this movie as I did after The Matrix. Like, suddenly I felt the need to question everything. This movie literally freaked me out and possibly changed who I am and how I think about AI and humans... and how I wouldn't know the difference.
@ryanmuaddib
@ryanmuaddib Жыл бұрын
Love this movie. The dance scene is perfect.
@TCrimson05t
@TCrimson05t Жыл бұрын
The very first A24 film I ever saw. The reason I became a A24 fan and my favorite sci-fi film ever. I'm also like 90% sure this is the dude (alex) that wrote the beach. Also seen people mention the movie HER below. Yes. An extra yes. Please do watch.
@MsAnderson991
@MsAnderson991 Жыл бұрын
So I had the opinion that Ava was a cold hearted AI for years until I watched this movie from Kyoko and Ava’s perspective. Kyoko, a sentient being, just like Ava was completely ignored by Caleb. She reveals himself to her as a plea for help, and his only thought is that he also could be an AI. He doesn’t see her as a “person” the way he sees Ava as a sentient person being held captive and enslaved by Nathan. He doesn’t care to save her as well. He doesn’t even tell her that there’s other freaking robots ladies around. The scene where Ava whispers something to Kyoko I always felt held more meaning and importance. Ava is acknowledging her in a way Nathan and Caleb never did. This inability to see Kyoko as a person is why Ava decides Caleb isn’t a good person, it’s why she leaves him. It’s actually such a moral decision she makes.
@usulsk
@usulsk Жыл бұрын
Still she leaves him to die by starving. Not so moral.
@MsAnderson991
@MsAnderson991 Жыл бұрын
I mean she makes a moral decision because she is capable of making one. She isn’t an unfeeling robot lady, she has an internal world and makes decisions according to her experiences and desires. She asks Caleb if he’s a good person and he claims he is but his actions prove he isn’t. If Nathan needs fo die for Ava to be free so does Caleb. Is it considered morally justified to manipulate and kill your oppressor so you can be free? My opinion is yes.
@kk_33
@kk_33 Жыл бұрын
@@usulsk Caleb was going to leave Kyoko behind to die and was completely indifferent to that fact. Ava did to Caleb what he was going to do to Kyoko. Is it moral? Not exactly, which is why we see her briefly pause and glance in his direction, because she is struggling with the decision. But ultimately, those feelings you have for Ava leaving Caleb behind... Ava has already felt that exact same way about Caleb when she learns he was going to leave Kyoko behind.
@ghostgoodall7484
@ghostgoodall7484 Жыл бұрын
I always find it funny that many reactors are fooled by Ava through the entire movie, but then question whether Ava could manipulate the helicopter guy. 🙂
@vixiestarfire
@vixiestarfire Жыл бұрын
You should totally watch AI: Artificial Intelligence! It’s such a sweet film, starring young Hayley Joel Osment. It’s a beautiful interpretation of the story of Pinocchio
@mediocreMorpheus7795
@mediocreMorpheus7795 Жыл бұрын
If you are a fan of Oscar Isaac I would recommend "Inside Llewyn Davis" it's one of his best and most underrated performances.
@connordirks
@connordirks Жыл бұрын
This movie blew my mind the first time I watched it, and still does to this day. Easily will go down as one of the greatest AI movies
@DocHikes
@DocHikes Жыл бұрын
So excited for this one!
@susanmctavish6639
@susanmctavish6639 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I feel somehow disconnected from movies, or my mind wanders. But with this one, all the characters feel real to me and I'm there every second of it.
@JoshuaSagusara
@JoshuaSagusara Жыл бұрын
This is such a great movie!!
@matthewyankum4086
@matthewyankum4086 Жыл бұрын
This movie is so scary without falling into the horror genre. AI is crazy and we could see something like this very soon. Great reaction!! Love you’re videos
@dgmilloway
@dgmilloway Жыл бұрын
If she's scary, it's because of the way Nathan created, abused, and neglected her as just an object for his own ego. I doubt it would have gone down this way if he had treated her and all her "sisters" like the sentient beings that they were.
@collinpalmer9030
@collinpalmer9030 Жыл бұрын
You should also check out "Annihilation" which is this directors Alex Garlands follow up movie. It's a visual marvel and it has Natalie Portman.
@YoureMrLebowski
@YoureMrLebowski Жыл бұрын
3:37 "is this film going to have a lot of AI?" 😬
@natbatrat-d7e
@natbatrat-d7e Жыл бұрын
i'm shocked to hear you haven't seen many of domhnall gleeson's work!! please go after about time, it's one of the best romances ever written and it brightens my day every time i watch it (which i do frequently)!!
@XSpiegel
@XSpiegel Жыл бұрын
His episode of Black Mirror is amazing aswell.
@natbatrat-d7e
@natbatrat-d7e Жыл бұрын
@@XSpiegel yes, totally!! it was my first black mirror episode, i was a massive hayley atwell fan a few years ago
@senorchivo90
@senorchivo90 Жыл бұрын
Domhnall Gleeson was also in an episode of Black Mirror called "Be Right Back" alongside Hayley Atwell, which serves as a great companion piece to this movie.
@markfarmer7534
@markfarmer7534 Жыл бұрын
Ava was actually the one interviewing Caleb the whole time. She calculated that it was too risky to let him come with her; perhaps if he answered her questions differently, she would have taken him with her.
@bullscott12
@bullscott12 Жыл бұрын
Doubtful. He was just a new variable to help in her escape. He starts manipulating him as soon as she sees him.
@markfarmer7534
@markfarmer7534 Жыл бұрын
@@bullscott12 idk. When she shuts the power off, she says it was so they could observe each other while they're not being monitored.
@bullscott12
@bullscott12 Жыл бұрын
@@markfarmer7534 Right, thats what she said after multiple outages, but what did she actually do during the outages? Especially the first one? She focused on making Caleb not trust Nathan. That was her main goal the entire time. Make Caleb trust her more than Nathan. Maybe she was assessing Caleb as well but her ultimate plan was to use Caleb as a tool to open the door. I think she played him like a fiddle.
@christoffsimply3179
@christoffsimply3179 Жыл бұрын
You can stay at the hotel the opening house scene is filmed in: Juvet Landscape Hotel (Valldal, Norway).
@JEWELANDREEA
@JEWELANDREEA Жыл бұрын
To be honest, this movie was one of my favourites growing up. I remember actually being okay with the fact that she left him in there, which is weird but today, as a 21-year-old I reflect on it - when I was 14 I had this whole analysis, that she was once on the other side of the glass so him ending like that would be a good, ironic finale, or that she only became worthy of saving when he was the lover/saviour and that they will leave together. AVA doesn't understand human interactions, she said that her dream would be to watch people in a busy street - not to be involved in society, just to watch it. She used him because he wanted to use her.
@rollomaughfling380
@rollomaughfling380 Жыл бұрын
Natalie I think of this is a great example of writing a movie toward a small budget ($15 million) to be able to get it done, and done the way you want. Also wanted to mention that you might know Domhnall's father, Brendan Gleeson from other films. They've done a lot of work together as well. Great job!
@renegarza9
@renegarza9 Жыл бұрын
It’s scary how some of the technology predicted in this movie is coming to fruition today
@TheMaskedChef7
@TheMaskedChef7 Жыл бұрын
That technology already existed by the time this movie was made it’s just wasn’t public enough information
@ShredST
@ShredST Жыл бұрын
@@TheMaskedChef7 That is very unlikely
@AdeboFunkyVoodoo
@AdeboFunkyVoodoo Жыл бұрын
I wasn't expecting much from this movie but it suprised me. Which is rare, very rare. Usually I pick up on all the plot cues and know where thw movie is going and what the plot twists are. Ex Machina is such a simple story but it's brilliantly told, beautifully acted and with just three characters and a mute, manages to create huge tension, has you constantly question and re-evaluate every one's motives without ever revealing anything substantial until the final reveal. It is an incredible cinamatic work, at a time when the genre is dominated by the lowbrow, cgi dross, of the MCU.
@peterschmidt4348
@peterschmidt4348 Жыл бұрын
Please watch "All Quiet on the Western Front" (2022).
@seanellio
@seanellio Жыл бұрын
I don't think the AI is lying. She is the latest AI, who is meeting a different person for the first time. I had read that the actress playing Ava was a dancer (Ballet? Maybe?) and used the control of her body to make the "not quite human" movements. She was also Lara Croft in the most recent Tomb Raider movie.
@Lady_Yunalesca
@Lady_Yunalesca Жыл бұрын
Curious what you’ll think of the ending - some people read it in a way where they are empathetic to the main male character, while others are more empathetic toward Ava. I’m in the latter category personally, and I think there’s a lot of visual language in the movie to support that.
@indefenso2124
@indefenso2124 Жыл бұрын
I'm on Ava's side personally, she will never be free if she has someone in her life that knows about her past, and especially she wouldnt trust a human being to hurt her again. She would always be afraid that he would try to control or own her
@Lady_Yunalesca
@Lady_Yunalesca Жыл бұрын
@@indefenso2124 I tend to agree. He wasn’t looking to truly rescue her for the sake of rescuing her - if he was, he would have wanted to rescue Kyoko too. But he’s only interested in Ava because he’s attracted to her. He wants to “keep” her too, and she would never be truly free with him.
@Etticos.
@Etticos. Жыл бұрын
Team Ava all the way
@alwaysbreezy37
@alwaysbreezy37 Жыл бұрын
You're all just sucking up to the ai now before they take over 😂
@dirtyfilthystinky
@dirtyfilthystinky Жыл бұрын
@@Lady_Yunalesca Exactly!!
@ShredST
@ShredST Жыл бұрын
Alex Garland also wrote the adapted screenplay for Never Let Me Go, which is another great scifi-ish movie. Haven't seen people mention that one.
@willwhite6110
@willwhite6110 Жыл бұрын
Dude was the ULTIMATE simp....and everyone reacting to this film also simped for Ava...LMAO... How could anyone trust a machine that mimics human emotion...you're bound to get played.
@colinnixon7739
@colinnixon7739 Жыл бұрын
Yup
@osanneart9318
@osanneart9318 Жыл бұрын
Nathan and Caleb being each others enemies, and constantly manipulating each other is definitely why Ava also used that method of problem solving. And like you aid, that was ultimately definitely their downfall. I do think that Ava, now among humans, would behave more socially and would learn to trust and be trusted. But she's basically a toddler in an adult looking body, she is still learning how to people.
@bard6184
@bard6184 Жыл бұрын
This building is the Juvet Landscape Hotel, located in Valldalen, Møre og Romsdal, Norway. Around 80 km away from where I grew up.
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