Movies DVDs Music Books Comix TV Games Sports The Hit List Weekly Sweeps at HJ HWJ Blogs
In Stores | Top Sales | Index | DVD/Movie Archive

Title Search: Advanced Search
         
now_playingAboutHeader

AI Artificial Intelligence (2001)
Release Date:


MPAA Rating:
PG-13

Rating Reason:
For some sexual content and violent images

Genre:
Fantasy, Sci-Fi

Starring:
Haley Joel Osment, Jude Law, Frances O'Connor, Sam Robards, Brendan Gleeson, William Hurt, Jake Thomas, Robin Williams (narrator)

Written By:
Steven Spielberg

Director:
Steven Spielberg

Official Site:
AI Artificial Intelligence (2001)

Synopsis:
It is a time when natural resources are limited and technology is advancing at an astronomical pace. Where you live is monitored; what you eat is engineered; and the person serving you is not a person at all. It's artificial. Gardening, housekeeping, companionship -- there is a robot for every need. Except love.

Emotion is the last, controversial frontier in robot evolution. Robots are seen as sophisticated appliances; they're not supposed to have feelings. But with so many parents not yet approved to have children, the possibilities abound. Click to enlarge

And Cybertronics Manufacturing has created the solution.

His name is David (HALEY JOEL OSMENT).

A robotic boy, the first programmed to love, David is adopted as a test case by a Cybertronics employee (SAM ROBARDS) and his wife (FRANCES O'CONNOR), whose own terminally ill child has been cryogenically frozen until a cure can be found. Though he gradually becomes their child, with all the love and stewardship that entails, a series of unexpected circumstances make this life impossible for David.

Without final acceptance by humans or machines, and armed only with Teddy, his supertoy teddy bear and protector, David embarks on a journey to discover where he truly belongs, uncovering a world in which the line between robot and machine is both terrifyingly vast and profoundly thin.

AI Artificial Intelligence (2001) | Preview

More than a contemporary translation
Mike Furches

I enjoy actually going to the movies and seeing and hearing the reactions of the crowds while waiting in line to get in, as well as the reactions of the audience during the movie. While waiting to enter the theater I was somewhat surprised by the reaction of the audience leaving the previous screening. One of my fears about this particular movie is that audiences are expecting E.T. or other Spielberg style films that involve children. Instead, what they get is an adult fairy tale complete with moral lessons and implications. Each AI viewer should be aware of the important impact late director and writer E.T. or other Spielberg style films that involve children. Instead, what they get is an adult fairy tale complete with moral lessons and implications. Each AI viewer should be aware of the important impact late director and writer Stanley Kubrick had on the film; it was he who obtained the original rights from the short story by Brian Aldiss, "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" in the 1970s. He also collaborated with Stephen Spielberg on the film and screenplay during his final years. A piece of ironic AI trivia is that Spielberg felt so passionate about this project that this is the first film in several years that he felt compelled to take his involvement one step further and actually write the screenplay.

Over the years Steven Spielberg has given us films that have had as much spiritual impact as any producer or director in Hollywood. Among those films include the classics Saving Private Ryan, Schindlers' List, Amistad and others. It has been obvious over the years of film making that Spielberg has been able to incorporate spiritual truths into many of his films. AI is uniquely different. There are numerous spiritual components addressed in the movie as well as the social commentary that is so typical within Stanley Kubrick films. AI is also a film that fortunately, Kubrick recognized needed the touch of someone like Spielberg who had shown the ability to work with children and tell stories in a non threatening, yet thought-provoking way.

Click to enlargeSimply put, AI Artificial Intelligence is a contemporary translation of Pinocchio, but it is also much more and is done in such a way that will cause the audience to reflect and think about its meaning. That is of course if the audience can be prepared to address a serious subject prior to attending the film as opposed to expecting a light-hearted children's tale. I would even discourage taking young children due to some of the subject matter and the fact that very young children will have a difficult time understanding many of the components covered in the film. I do believe that children 10 and older will be able to understand and relate to the characters portrayed in AI, especially the lead character David Sinton played to perfection by Haley Joel Osment.

Continue: 1 2 3


Copyright © 2001 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.