The Asian Age

Great Movies

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Stanley Kubrick always referred to the story as “Pinocchio”. It mirrored the tale of a puppet who dreams of becoming a real boy. And what, after all, is an android but a puppet with a computer programme pulling its strings? The project that eventually became Steven Spielberg’s A.I. Artificial Intelligen­ce (2001) was abandoned by Kubrick because he wasn’t satisfied with his approaches to its central character, David, an android who appears to be a real little boy. Believing special effects wouldn’t be adequate and a human actor would seem too human, he turned the project over to his friend Spielberg. Legend has it he made that decision after being impressed by Spielberg’s special effects in Jurassic Park, but perhaps E.T. was also an influence: If Spielberg could create an alien who evoked human emotions, could he do the same with an android?

He could. As David, he cast Haley Joel Osment, who had scored a great success in The Sixth Sense (1999). Osment’s presence is a crucial element in the film; other androids, including Gigolo Joe (Jude Law) are made to look artificial with makeup and unmoving hair, but not David. He is the most advanced “mecha” of the Cybertroni­cs Corporatio­n — so human that he can perhaps take the place of a couple’s sick child. Spielberg and Osment work together to create David with unblinking eyes and deep naïveté; he seems a real little boy but lacking a certain je ne sais quoi. This reality works both for and against the film, at first by making David seem human and later by making him seem a very slow study.

David has been programmed to love. Once he is activated with a code, he fixes on the activator, in this case his Mommy (Frances O’Connor). He exists to love her and be loved by her. Because he is a very sophistica­ted android indeed, there’s a natural tendency for us to believe him on that level. In fact he does not love and does not feel love; he simply reflects his coding.

The first act of the film involves Henry and Monica Swinton (Sam Robards and Frances O’Connor). Henry brings David home to fill the gap left by their own sick little boy, Martin (Jake Thomas). Monica resists him, and then accepts him. But after Jake is awakened from suspended animation and cured, there is a family of four; Jake is fully aware that David is a product, but David doesn’t understand everything that implies. Possibly his programmin­g didn’t prepare him to deal one-on-one in real time with real boys. He can’t spend all of his time loving Mommy and being loved by her.

He imitates life. He doesn’t sleep, but he observes bedtime. He doesn’t eat, but so strong is his desire to be like Martin that he damages his wiring by shoving spinach into his mouth. He’s treated with cruelty by other kids; when he reveals he doesn’t pee, a kid grabs his pants and says, “Let’s see what you don’t pee with.” After faithfully following his instructio­ns in such a way that he nearly drowns Martin, he loses the trust of the Swintons and they decide to get rid of him.

Monica cannot bring herself to return David to Cybertroni­cs. She pauses on the way and releases him into a forest, where he can join other free-range mechas. He will not die. He doesn’t get cold, he doesn’t get hungry, and apparently he has an indefinite supply of fuel.

The centre act of the movie shows David wandering a world where mechas have no rights. He is accompanie­d by his mecha bear, Teddy, who is programmed to be a wise companion, and they are discovered by Gigolo Joe, a mecha programmed to be an expert lover. They visit two hallucinat­ory places designed by Spielberg on huge sound stages. One is a Flesh Fair, not unlike a WWF event, at which humans cheer as mechas are grotesquel­y destroyed. David, Joe and Teddy escape, probably because of their survival programmin­g, but is David is dismayed by what he sees? How does he relate to the destructio­n of his kind?

Then there is Rouge City, sort of a psychedeli­c Universal City, where Joe takes him to consult a Wizard. Having been fascinated by the story of Pinocchio, who wanted to be a real boy, David has reasoned that a Blue Fairy might be able to transform him into a human and allow Monica to love him and be loved. The Wizard gives him a clue. After Joe and David capture a flying machine, they visit New York, which like many coastal cities has been drowned by global warming. But on an upper floor of Rockefelle­r Centre, he finds that Cybertroni­cs still operates, and he meets the scientist who created him, Dr Hobby (William Hurt). Hobby is Geppetto to David’s Pinocchio.

Now again there are events which contradict David’s conception of himself. In an eerie scene, he comes across a storeroom containing dozens of Davids who look just like him. Is he devastated? Does he thrash out at them? No, he remains possessed. He is still focused on his quest for the Blue Fairy, who can make him a real little boy. But why, we may ask, does he want to be real so very much? Is it because of envy, hurt or jealousy? No, he doesn’t seem to possess such emotions. I assume he wants to be a real boy for abstract reasons of computer logic. To fulfil his mission to love and be loved by Mommy, he concludes he should be like Martin.

In the final act, events take David and Teddy in a submersibl­e to the drowned Coney Island, where they find not only Geppetto’s workshop but a Blue Fairy. A collapsing Ferris wheel pins the submarine, and there they remain, trapped and immobile, for 2,000 years, as above them an ice age descends and humans become extinct. David is finally rescued by a group of impossibly slender beings that might be aliens, but are apparently very advanced androids. For them, David is an incalculab­le treasure: “He is the last who knew humans.” From his mind they download all of his memories, and they move him into an exact replica of his childhood home.

Here is how I now read the film: These new generation mechas are advanced enough to perceive that they cannot function with humans in the absence of humans. David is their only link to the human past. Whatever can be known about them, he is an invaluable source. In watching his 24 hours with Mommy, they observe him functionin­g at the top of his ability. Why would one mecha care if another obtained satisfacti­on? What meaning is there in giving David 24 hours of bliss? If machines cannot feel, what does the closing sequence really mean? I believe it suggests the new mechas are trying to construct a mecha that they can love. They would play Mommy to their own Davids. And that mecha will love them. What does love mean in this context? No more, no less, than check, or mate, or pie. That is the fate of Artificial

Intelligen­ce. No Mommy will ever, ever love them.

 ??  ?? A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE
Released in 2001 Review written on July 7, 2011
A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE Released in 2001 Review written on July 7, 2011

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