A.I. Rising
A.I. Rising | |
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Directed by | Lazar Bodroža[1] |
Screenplay by | Dimitrije Vojnov |
Based on | Zoran Nešković (1980s short story) |
Produced by | Aleksandar Protić and Jonathan English |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Kosta Glusica |
Edited by | Milena Z. Petrovic |
Music by | Nemanja Mosurovic |
Production companies | Film Center Serbia and Mir Media Group |
Distributed by | Lionsgate Home Entertainment (USA) |
Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Serbia |
Language | English |
Budget | €350,000[2] ($400.000) |
A.I. Rising (also known as Ederlezi[a] Rising and Ederlezi ébredése) is a 2018 English-language Serbian science fiction film directed by Lazar Bodroža and based on a 1980s short story by Zoran Nešković that was adapted for film by screenwriter Dimitrije Vojnov.[2] The film stars Sebastian Cavazza, Stoya, Marusa Majer and Kirsty Besterman.
Plot
In a
Nimani is activated during the trip and Milutin experiments with her programmed scenarios. He finds her to be too artificial and submissive, unlike the human women he has experienced. Milutin gets bored and creates a scenario where she acts as a young first time lover, in which he rapes her. Milutin discovers that Nimani has a parallel operating system based on experiences shaped by interactions with the user, and that he can remove her pre-programmed constraints if he can get advanced access, which is denied by the ship's onboard computer. The two become romantically entwined, and after Milutin starts an argument scenario, he finds that she is beginning to act beyond her routines, and reads emotion into the interaction. Determined to find out if her feelings are real or programmed, he forces the ship into a tailspin, which makes the ship's computer grant him advanced access.
He deletes the software embedded in her and rather than being grateful for freeing her from her limitations, she reacts negatively to his deletion of her root programming, and denies him sex. Milutin fades into a depression after Nimani rejects his advances. In order to maintain the mission objectives, Nimani tries to befriend Milutin and expresses her understanding of Milutin's goal to give her free will and make her more like a human. Realizing that she is the cause of his depression, she chooses to self-destruct to improve Milutin's mental state. Milutin is surprised to see her crying prior to self-destruction, and is told by the ship's computer her crying response prior to self-destruction was not pre-programmed but natural. He is devastated, but is told that he can save her by charging her internal battery, which requires a space walk and possible radiation poisoning. Milutin is able to charge the battery and successfully reactivate Nimani, but collapses prior to seeing Nimani wake. Nimani embraces and kisses Milutin as the ship continues onward. It is unclear whether Milutin survives.
Cast
- Sebastian Cavazza as Milutin
- Stoya as Nimani
- Marusa Majer as Social Engineer
- Kirsty Besterman as Computer
Reception
According to an OnVideo film review, A.I. Rising is a film that is a "mind-blowing, visually sumptuous space journey [that] will take you ... beyond the stars and deep inside your soul."
A.I. Rising won awards including best film, best director and best actor-actress awards, at
See also
- A.I. Artificial Intelligence – 2001 film by Steven Spielberg
- Android – 1982 science fiction film directed by Aaron Lipstadt
- Artificial intelligence – Intelligence of machines
- Blade Runner – 1982 science fiction film by Ridley Scott
- Ex Machina – 2014 film by Alex Garland
- Infinity Chamber – 2016 science fiction film directed by Travis Milloy
- List of artificial intelligence films
- Metropolis – German silent science-fiction film
- Solaris – 1972 science fiction film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
- The Machine – 2013 science fiction film directed by Caradog W. James
- 2001: A Space Odyssey– 1968 film directed by Stanley Kubrick
- Synthetic intelligence - an alternative/opposite term for artificial intelligence
- Weak AI- artificial intelligence that implements a limited part of mind
References
Footnotes
- spring equinox).
Citations
- ^ a b Staff (2018). "Official WebSite - "A.I. Rising" - Ederlezi Inc. The People's Corporation". Ederlezi.org. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ a b c Garcevic, Srdjan (May 11, 2018). "How 'Advertising Slaves' Made Serbia's First Sci-Fi Hit - Director Lazar Bodroza recalls the leap of faith he took to make 'Ederlezi Rising', Serbia's first-ever sci-fi film – and an unexpected hit with fans of the genre". BalkinInsight.com. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Staff (2019). "'A.I. Rising' Gets Intimate on Digital, Disc March 12 [2019]". OnVideo.org. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
- ^ Petkovic, Vladan (February 26, 2018). "Review: Ederlezi Rising". Cineuropa. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Clarke, Jeremy (July 10, 2018). "Film Review - Ederlezi Rising". DMovies.org. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Garcevic, Srdjan (February 26, 2019). "Ederlezi Rising (2018) Review". The Nutshell Times. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Krunić (February 26, 2018). "A.I. Rising 2018 - 3stars". LetterBoxD.com. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Kay, Jeremy (February 17, 2018). "Arclight boards sci-fi romance 'Ederlezi Rising' (exclusive)". ScreenDaily.com. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
External links
- Official website
- A.I. Rising at IMDb
- A.I. Rising at Rotten Tomatoes
- Related videos: