This is a thriller that achieves its thrilling aspect without action sequences. This is a more psychological thriller. It does not slack on an intellectual level at all, embracing the "science" in science fiction--explaining the computer science behind Ava and the complexities of a Turing test. The movie is one long thought experiment that waxes philosophical provokes the audience into contemplating artificial intelligence. How can it be achieved? What will it look like? What will it be capable of? How will we know when it becomes self aware? Can we distinguish between artificial intelligence and natural intelligence? Where is technology going?
The story takes place in a secluded estate in the middle of the woods in an environment that resembles Fallingwater. This is a state-of-the-art facility with security cameras everywhere, ominous lighting and an ultra-modern stylish design to match a stylish movie. The twist at the end is somewhat expected, but extremely well executed and highly satisfying.
The acting is all superb. Oscar Isaac plays the rich and eccentric Nathan, the CEO of a large search engine, who lives far away from civilization alone with his maid. Isaac leaves the audience questioning his motives throughout the movie. Domhnall Gleeson, too, is excellent as an inquisitive, curious Turing test administrator. But Alicia Vikander steals the show as Ava, Nathan's AI creation. She is simultaneously robotic and human, blurring the already thin line between technology and humanity.
The story takes place in a secluded estate in the middle of the woods in an environment that resembles Fallingwater. This is a state-of-the-art facility with security cameras everywhere, ominous lighting and an ultra-modern stylish design to match a stylish movie. The twist at the end is somewhat expected, but extremely well executed and highly satisfying.
The acting is all superb. Oscar Isaac plays the rich and eccentric Nathan, the CEO of a large search engine, who lives far away from civilization alone with his maid. Isaac leaves the audience questioning his motives throughout the movie. Domhnall Gleeson, too, is excellent as an inquisitive, curious Turing test administrator. But Alicia Vikander steals the show as Ava, Nathan's AI creation. She is simultaneously robotic and human, blurring the already thin line between technology and humanity.
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