Director Steven Spielberg's A.I. propels you into a future of astounding technology and adventure beyond the human imagination in an extraordinary film the New York Observer hails as a "masterpiece"... This description may be from another edition of this product.
This movie is based on a screen story by Ian Watson and the 1969 short story "Super-Toys Last All Summer Long" by Brian Aldiss.
What happened? Popular actors, a big budget, a whelming director. I think this suffers from the same syndrome that “Star Wars” episode one was affected by. It is way too cutesy and like a dream (nightmare) if you get painted into a corner, just add a new element. Each actor alone was great with the elements that they were given; however, as a whole, they never jelled.
One thing that saves this film is the inclusion of the DVD goodies. The making of the film and the theory behind the film are more interesting than the film. If you’d like to Gigolo Joe, then that is primarily because they allowed Jude Law to put a little bit of his slant on the character.
In the final a-n-a-l-y-s-i-s, this is a tearjerker with no redeeming social value.
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence Mentions in Our Blog
M3GAN and the Rise of Marvelously Malevolent Dolls
Published by Terry Fleming • January 17, 2023
Hello Boils and Ghouls! THRIFT KEEPER here (named for my devilish ability to find the Best Bargains among Blood-Curdling titles!), and today I'd like to talk to you about dolls.
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