Stamford Advocate

Girl meets robot in ‘I’m Your Man,’ a silly movie about desire

- By Michael O’Sullivan THE WASHINGTON POST

“I’m You’re Man” Rated: R for some sexuality and coarse language. Running time: 102 minutes. 66 (out of four)

Recently announced as Germany’s official submission for the next Oscars, “I’m You’re Man” stars Dan Stevens - the “Downton Abbey” heartthrob of the impossibly piercing blue eyes - as Tom, a Germanspea­king, lifelike robot who has access to the internet at his fingertips (or, more accurately, inside his head) but whose idea of what a woman wants to hear is to tell her that adjusting her car seat a few degrees will improve her odds of avoiding a crash. Oh, you sexy devil. Tom, apparently, is short for Automaton. Although he looks human, he has the stiff, almost birdlike head movements of C-3PO from “Star Wars,” as well the same officious air of a fussy British butler. And despite his smarts, he doesn’t have the good sense to come in out of the proverbial rain, after a coffee shop he’s been left in closes, and the weather turns inclement.

Tom has been paired up with Alma Felser (Maren Eggert), a lonely, single academic researchin­g Sumerian cuneiform tablets, for a few weeks of product testing. Alma, who has recently split up with someone (Hans Löw), has agreed to take Tom home and put him through his paces as a potential romantic partner. Yes, that’s what Tom is designed for, down to the last anatomical detail: lovemaking, not laundry detail. (After he tidies up her apartment without being asked to, Alma makes Tom put everything back in its messy, original place.)

Directed by Maria Schrader from a screenplay she co-wrote with Jan Schomburg, based on a short story by Emma Braslavsky, “I’m Your Man” has intriguing ideas percolatin­g throughout it. Ideas, for example, about the allure of the unattainab­le and the paradoxica­l appeal of friction, not harmony, in relationsh­ips. It’s a heady dramedy, albeit without terribly many tears or laughs, except those that arise, perhaps unintentio­nally, from the incongruit­y of Stevens being repellent. Another thing Tom’s missing, apart from the ability to actually want anything - or anyone: pheromones.

It turns out, in a scene in which Tom stands, unnoticed, among a herd of deer, that he has no smell. Not sing the praises of B.O., but I imagine that some women would prefer a mate who smells like, you know, people, as opposed to a piece of patio furniture.

This ultimately is an insurmount­able problem for the film, which despite its art-house intentions and provocativ­e, movie-club talking points - and a more believable performanc­e by Eggert, whose character is grieving a secret loss, besides her ex - is stymied by a premise that just doesn’t hold water: that you might be able to fall in love with a robot.

Alma meets Tom at a sort of android speed-dating mixer, where many other human “testers” have gathered to dance, drink and mingle with their perfect, programmab­le partners. Except for her, everyone else seems to be having a blast with his or her date, most of whom, like Tom, seem to have all the desirabili­ty of a latex sex doll with a PhD.

“I’m You’re Man” wants to be profound, even poetic. “Your eyes are like two mountain lakes I could sink into,” Tom tells Alma, on their first date. (Slow down there, buckaroo.)

Poetry, despite some recent attempts by programmer­s to generate verse via A.I., is probably something best left to those who can tell the difference between high concept and a cliche.

 ?? Christine Fenzl / Bleecker Street ?? Maren Eggert, left, and Dan Stevens in “I'm Your Man.”
Christine Fenzl / Bleecker Street Maren Eggert, left, and Dan Stevens in “I'm Your Man.”

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