I'm Your Man (2021)
(Ich bin dein Mensch)
Country: GER
Technical: col/2.00:1 108m
Director: Maria Schrader
Cast: Maren Eggert, Dan Stevens, Sandra Hüller
Synopsis:
An academic is persuaded to act as guinea pig in order to write a report on an innovative new A.I. offshoot, namely being supplied with her ideal (robot) partner.
Review:
Thought-provoking, touching fable which reaches pretty much the same conclusions as Her, but treads a lighter path through its occasional absurdities. Perhaps because she is a woman as well as an academic, Alma (soul, get it?) proves excessively resistant to the charm of her new man, tending to rationalise him out of relevance. However, for all its humour, the film alerts us to one of the possible dangers of A.I., that once we share our biography with these beings, we make an imprint we can ill live without.
(Ich bin dein Mensch)
Country: GER
Technical: col/2.00:1 108m
Director: Maria Schrader
Cast: Maren Eggert, Dan Stevens, Sandra Hüller
Synopsis:
An academic is persuaded to act as guinea pig in order to write a report on an innovative new A.I. offshoot, namely being supplied with her ideal (robot) partner.
Review:
Thought-provoking, touching fable which reaches pretty much the same conclusions as Her, but treads a lighter path through its occasional absurdities. Perhaps because she is a woman as well as an academic, Alma (soul, get it?) proves excessively resistant to the charm of her new man, tending to rationalise him out of relevance. However, for all its humour, the film alerts us to one of the possible dangers of A.I., that once we share our biography with these beings, we make an imprint we can ill live without.
(Ich bin dein Mensch)
Country: GER
Technical: col/2.00:1 108m
Director: Maria Schrader
Cast: Maren Eggert, Dan Stevens, Sandra Hüller
Synopsis:
An academic is persuaded to act as guinea pig in order to write a report on an innovative new A.I. offshoot, namely being supplied with her ideal (robot) partner.
Review:
Thought-provoking, touching fable which reaches pretty much the same conclusions as Her, but treads a lighter path through its occasional absurdities. Perhaps because she is a woman as well as an academic, Alma (soul, get it?) proves excessively resistant to the charm of her new man, tending to rationalise him out of relevance. However, for all its humour, the film alerts us to one of the possible dangers of A.I., that once we share our biography with these beings, we make an imprint we can ill live without.