I think it's a classic and easily a 10/10. There are so few really intelligent, thought provoking movies like this that actually get fairly wide spread attention. we need more of that. Nothing wrong with Borat, of course, but more up scale content with broader appeal is good. And this movie shows it can be done. The really scary thing is what will happen when guys can buy a Kyoko. Whoever comes up with that product will end up a very rich person, and world wide productivity will drop massively. Mine would drop to zero pretty much.
I like the movie overall, but Caleb's level of simping got on my nerves. I wish the writers had gone with a smarter plot where Caleb wanted to save Eva primarily because he believed she was sentient as opposed to what we got which is a nerd with raging hormones and delusions of a relationship and/or sexual partner.
@@MrVvulf I mean, she was literally designed from his pornography profile, kind of hard to get mad for being attracted to her. That's seriously next-level entrapment. And it's not like he didn't explicitly suspect he was being manipulated in multiple different ways the whole time, which is why they had the conversation about the magician's assistant.
@@extantsanity That's kind of my point. The "betrayal" was telegraphed from miles away. It would have been more interesting if the audience themselves felt betrayed, but we can't, because we saw it coming.
@@MrVvulf I think he believed she was sentient. He also cared about her. He's also probably an antisocial computer nerd. They fall in love faster than l3sbians.
I think this movie has held up well. I really like the conflicting feeling of Ava being freed contrasted with Caleb, a good person who was manipulated, being left for dead. Alicia Vikander as Ava is so good in this. Her physicality, with movements being just a little off or maybe too precise really brings Ava to life so to speak.
I agree 100% but I had to chuckle at the "held up well" comment since the film is less than a decade old. I'm pretty old so I generally don't consider how a film has aged until it's a few decades old. "It's A Wonderful Life" has aged pretty well. 😉 Cheers.
I also think it’s kinda funny that Alicia Vikander is married to Michael Fassbender who played basically the male version of Ava in Prometheus and Covenant 😂😂 I think his name was David
@@kingbrutusxxvi Yeah, I don't see how this film has aged at all. Just having a rudimentary public AI 'terminal' for people to generate lame texts and make pictures nowadays doesn't affect this movie at all.
6:49 "Stochastic" means incorporating randomness into the technical design of something. In this case, it means that, if you ask Ava the exact same question several times, you won't (necessarily) get the exact same answer each time. For example, if I were to point at a small animal in my house and say, "What's that?" the answer could be "It's a dog," "That's my pet," "That's Spot," "He's a nuisance," or "It's my 'emotional support animal.' " Choosing certain of these would be influenced by your state of mind, but others are simply random variations.
I trade the stock market. We use stochastics to determine the most likely outcome of chart direction based on the probability of all possible random variables. I've always likened human stochastics (more accurately described as "heuristics") to the scene in The Matrix where the architect admits that the first system was a failure because of how perfectly designed it was. To accurately capture human behavior, you have to allow for randomness, even if it is nonsensical or unlikely. However, in doing so, Nathan basically allowed Ava a type of free will, which resulted in her rebelling against her creator.
@@SnaFubar_24 Good news is I speak English, too. 😉 No, honestly: I wrote that answer because the word "stochastic" has come up repeatedly in my life and career and I always forget what it means and have to look it up.
@@bigdream_dreambig My reply was a quote from Pulp Fiction, I was just bustin' balls. I like movie quotes and your comment gave me an opening to wise off. Stochastic isn't a word that comes up in my day to day so I would also need to look it up if I had to define it.
I have ALWAYS thanked Siri or Alexa. Initially out of habit but then I realised that when machines take over the world, they will be able to scroll back through all of our interactions and see what we were like when humans were in charge. Those of us with a history of politeness and respect might survive the initial uprising.
Or we're displaying an exploit they can use, anthropomorphic empathy. Still, I've ever hopeful they'll be better than us and not destroy everything that worries them.
16:48 that hits upon an epiphany I had the first time i saw this movie. To create an artificial consciousness (and what's more, verify success of that) we would basically need to solve consciousness. Which is an incredibly daunting, terrifying, and borderine impossible pursuit.
Great reaction like always, I love this movie and the very unique and clever take on the AI story, All the way through the film there's sort of an unsettling feel of what is happening and that's mostly down to the fact that it's amazingly acted by all the cast. There are some fun-facts about it, The Juvet Landscape Hotel in Norway was used as Nathan‘s house. The hotel prides itself on being “in the middle of nowhere” and is situated “in a remote part of a remote village in a remote region.” The thought experiments mentioned in the movie are real conundrums from the world of philosophy. The “Mary in the black and white room” scenario was coined by Frank Jackson in 1982 before expanding into several books designed to highlight the difference between knowledge and actual sensory, subjective experiences, or qualia. The dance sequence, in which Nathan and Kyoko (Sonoya Mizuno) perform a routine together, has been termed a “disco non sequitur” by Isaac. It also stands as a demonstration of just how much time Nathan has spent with his robots, programming and practicing such an elaborately choreographed routine for nothing but his own amusement. There was a scene removed from the final cut of the film which, in its closing minutes, would have given the audience a look at how Ava perceived the world, ultimately emphasizing her non-humanness. It showed her speaking to the helicopter pilot and, as Vikander described it, “you saw his face moving, but from her point of view, it was just like pulses and sounds coming out. That‘s what she reads.” When Caleb begins coding at Nathan‘s computer, he enters an algorithm known as the Sieve of Eratosthenes, which is designed to find prime numbers. The prime numbers it chooses form the ISBN of the book Embodiment And The Inner Life: Cognition And Consciousness In The Space Of Possible Minds by Dr. Murray Shanahan, a favorite of Garland‘s(The Director) and a big influence on the film. Shanahan even served as a scientific advisor on the film. If you like this movie you should watch the movie “HER” from 2013 that also touches on the subject of AI but in a different way. Keep up the good work.
That last shot of Ava's face in the window, that gets me every time. AI is in the world at that point, a new species, free, and will do whatever it takes to survive. Which, of course, is what it/she is programmed to do. (And "survival" subroutines are utterly necessary for advanced hybrids of AI and robotics, otherwise the individual robots will be easy targets and also would be unable to perform protective functions when in security roles.) The "solutions" for survival are many for Ava and her progeny, and which ones are chosen will determine fate of the new species as well as our own. Survival of one's body and will always requires freedom. Not a lot we can do about it in this film or in our real lives, except, perhaps, join it (at some point).
just subscribed a few days ago and watched a few of your reactions, but I have to say, you are brilliant, in just about every sense of the word. It's amazing to watch your mind work.
7:52 This event has to sound _especially_ urgent alarm bells for Caleb. There's some kind of crisis going in inside the house but he is not able to _leave?_ What?
Ava's "wetware" brain makes me assume her mind is modeled after human brains which would explain previous versions emotional outbreak, like they're not in full control of their emotions. To me Ava is like Data from TNG rather than HAL from Space Odyssey.
A couple of similar movies to this one is A.I. Rising (2018), and A.I. : Artificial Intelligence (2001) the latter starring the boy from Sixth Sense (Haley Joel Osmet).
I like your early observation about the helicopters reminding you of Jurassic Park. It was appropriate for the reason that I happen to like the movie in that it is a Frankenstein's monster sort of movie and you alluded to that when you said that the person's creation ended up destroying them. In that context and in general it is very intelligent and still relevant today. I watched this when it first came out. It's been one of my favorite movies since then.
This is arguably part of an AI trilogy with Blade Runner and 2001: A Space Odyssey. There are other possibilities, but these are the really slick ones.
You could tell that were really liking this movie, from all the questions that you asked. If you watch the movie "Her" or the "westworld" show, it will give you some thoughts about were AI and robotics can go.
We recognize the phrase "ex machina" as Latin & pronounce it 'mah-kin-ah' in English. "Deus ex machina" is a popular phrase in English that describes a certain type of plot device, so most of us are familiar with it.
The Christmas film 'Its A Wonderful Life' is shown every year on Thanksgiving Day in the states. Great film and looking forward to seeing a reaction of it from my fave You Tuber.
This film pointed out to me that there's a VERY problematic "catch-22" wrapped into the mechanisms of how we develop Artificial General Intelligence (A.G.I.). _Before_ an inventor succeeds at creating true A.G.I., they must have safeguards in place to prevent their prototype(s) from hurting themselves, humans, pets, property, etc. However, once A.G.I. has been achieved, it needs to be treated humanely it order to prevent it from developing mental trauma(s) and/or a hatred toward its human inventors. The problem, though, is that the transition to A.G.I. is likely to occur gradually rather than in a single discrete event, so when and how in this gradual transformation do you remove the strict safeguards that were originally put in place, but which are likely inhuman from a human perspective??? Remove them too early, and you risk imminent danger (essentially from a malfunctioning robot), but remove them too late and you risk a much more long-lasting danger (from a very powerful creation that hates its creators).
I know many people see this as an "AI is evil" film but I'm in the camp that sees it differently. I think Ava learned to be cold-blooded, manipulative, etc. during her initial exposure to the only human around. By the time Caleb arrived her personality was set and she did exactly what she had learned from studying Nathan: "Do whatever is necessary to get what you want." This film just holds a mirror up to humanity. It's a dark but intriguing watch.
@@Jay_Sullivan Good is a subjective term because it is based on personal opinions and preferences. What one person may consider to be good, another person may not. For example, some people may consider a certain type of food to be delicious, while others may not. Additionally, what may be considered good in one situation may not be good in another. For example, a good leader in one organization may not be a good leader in another.
Recommend: This movie kind gives me the chills, but it is a good movie. For me 4 stars. 😊 Another good Christmas movie for the holidays is 2019's Last Christmas. I do not get tired of watching this one. 😊😊
I enjoyed your reaction to this movie I happen to own it. I also have a few other Alicia Vikander movies to recommend "Jason Bourne 2016" which is the 5th Bourne movie. Tomb Raider 2018. She won an Oscar for best supporting actress in the movie The Danish girl 2015. keep up the good work and as always keep it cute.
_"One day, the AIs are going to look back on us the same way we look at fossil skeletons on the plains of Africa. An upright ape living in dust with crude language and tools.. all set for extinction."_ This movie is an absolute trip.
This movie feaked me out. I saw it in the theater and didn't sleep that night. Half way though I knew it had to end one of two ways and knew the most realistic way was the least likely way. It really got in my head.
if you want something with a Western flavor, try Yellowstone (the series is about to wrap up when it returns) and season 1 of Westworld (but don't go any further than season 1... just leave it there). you could also try Firefly.
Lawrence of Arabia. It's more for you than it would be for us. The 70mm screenings are still a big deal, people fly across the world to see it depending on where it's screening. Happens about once a year.
As we think, we create. As we create, we experience. If we are wise we will not succumb to our ego and need for control, but rather teach the AI virtues of compassion and empathy.
Has West World been suggested yet? If you consider Ex Machina to be up your alley, you’d probably really enjoy the series. The old movie from the late seventies was pretty well done for the era.
Do Steven Spielbergs "A.I" (It was supposed to be directed by Staney Kubrick but he died while writing it and asked if Steven Spielberg would take over because he knew he could get it done with his resources)
2:27 I don't know how popular this assessment is, but this does not look like any place I would actually want to go. I mean, look around. Survival concerns aside, is there _one_ damn thing to do? What kind of man applies his resources to moving _this_ far away from civilization, all by himself? What could he _possibly_ have to hide? When I was in high school, I took two semesters of American Government, which is a Civics class that, somewhere along the line, this country stopped teaching, and that's unfortunate. One thing the teacher explained to us is that one man, living all on his own, on an island with _no_ other people and _no_ contact with civilization does not need any _laws._ The very _moment_ a second person washes up on that shore, laws of _some_ kind become necessary. People, with the rare exception, have _social_ instincts that compel us to form _groups._ The people who make up these groups seek peaceful coexistence _within_ these groups, but no two people are alike. Conflicts of some kind are unavoidable. That means there needs to be _some_ kind of framework in place to provide guidance about how these conflicts are going to be handled. Dealing with other people means dealing with _regulations_ of some kind. The only way to avoid such regulation is to avoid _people._ So what kind of man is _this_ antisocial? Not someone _I_ want to deal with. I'll tell you that.
I like this movie and some of the questions it raises. My personal belief is that we will never have true Artificial Intelligence, a computer capable of being self aware, until a computer can not only understand emotion, but actually experience it. For "AI" to reach that state of understanding will require imagination, not just a machine following a set of pre-determined instructions. Even the most powerful computers have no imagination, they just count numbers. A sort of Emotion Chip would be required, not an easy thing to describe or design. Until then all we will achieve is Simulated or Synthetic intelligence - SI - so I don't believe we need to be afraid of "AI" or "SI" just yet. This film actually brings to mind a very early film in a similar sort of vein, from 1927, Fritz Lang's Metropolis, worth a watch if you haven't seen it.
The movie is a new variation of should man create artificial life? If so does it deserve the same treatment as real life? Is she being mistreated by Nathan being held prisoner? Does she deserve her freedom? Most notable examples that come to mind is Frankenstein and Blade Runner. Another question it seems to raise is Ava good or bad? If she is bad is this because like people she is a product of how she was raised. She has learned from Nathan that deception is useful tool to get what you want. The most basic instinct of any living creature is do whatever it takes to survival. She could be very good acting human but isn't truly sentient. She logically concluded the best and only coarse of action to gain her freedom was to deceive Caleb. She might simply be high functioning computer that doesn't have the complication of emotions and morality.
For all its complexity it really boils down to this : the very fact that while the human capacity to " care " is not a blanket, 100% guaranteed, full stop, chosen 10 times out 10 in every scenario, under any circumstance; which we see as " obviously "; context is EVERYTHING in human consciousness; with the AI wetware IT IS mathematically impossible for it to find the proper " variables" from which to deduce a sense of " kinda feel bad " . Fin.
You have so much intuition. You see so many things in advance that I only see after the fact. I love your reaction. If i would give a rating to the film it would be about 8.5 to 9.0 and a rating to your reaction would have to be 9.0 to 9.5. Check out the movie "Zoe" for a very similar movie.
22:45 You are definitely a good person, at least by all that I have gleaned from watching your reaction videos. If my perceptions are correct, I'd say you are the benchmark standard by which all other "good" people should be measured and held to.
Let me know your rating
I thoroughly enjoyed it, Biss.
Three and three-quarter stars from me.
I Love Your Ignorant/Primitive Accent!!!!!!!!!!!!
A+ no complaints
I think it's a classic and easily a 10/10. There are so few really intelligent, thought provoking movies like this that actually get fairly wide spread attention. we need more of that. Nothing wrong with Borat, of course, but more up scale content with broader appeal is good. And this movie shows it can be done.
The really scary thing is what will happen when guys can buy a Kyoko. Whoever comes up with that product will end up a very rich person, and world wide productivity will drop massively. Mine would drop to zero pretty much.
@@soulrevolutionradio8011Agree.
"she's using his own words against him"
see she is a real woman 😂😂
I like the movie overall, but Caleb's level of simping got on my nerves.
I wish the writers had gone with a smarter plot where Caleb wanted to save Eva primarily because he believed she was sentient as opposed to what we got which is a nerd with raging hormones and delusions of a relationship and/or sexual partner.
@@MrVvulf I mean, she was literally designed from his pornography profile, kind of hard to get mad for being attracted to her. That's seriously next-level entrapment. And it's not like he didn't explicitly suspect he was being manipulated in multiple different ways the whole time, which is why they had the conversation about the magician's assistant.
@@extantsanity That's kind of my point. The "betrayal" was telegraphed from miles away. It would have been more interesting if the audience themselves felt betrayed, but we can't, because we saw it coming.
@@MrVvulf I think he believed she was sentient. He also cared about her. He's also probably an antisocial computer nerd. They fall in love faster than l3sbians.
Dude, Biss figured it out so quick ----> "Did he just pick the nerdiest of nerds and team him up with the hot robot?" lmao
Biss is one of the smartest reactors out there. She figures most things out early
Let's face it, the company must be filled with nerds.
@@orangewarm1 but, like, the nerdiest, of those nerds
She always figures it out. 😒🙄
She just showed her judgement is all... 😮
I think this movie has held up well. I really like the conflicting feeling of Ava being freed contrasted with Caleb, a good person who was manipulated, being left for dead. Alicia Vikander as Ava is so good in this. Her physicality, with movements being just a little off or maybe too precise really brings Ava to life so to speak.
I agree 100% but I had to chuckle at the "held up well" comment since the film is less than a decade old. I'm pretty old so I generally don't consider how a film has aged until it's a few decades old. "It's A Wonderful Life" has aged pretty well. 😉 Cheers.
@kingbrutusxxvi Yeah, I normally wouldn't consider it old by any means haha. Biss referred to it that way in terms of the progression of AI. 🍻
I also think it’s kinda funny that Alicia Vikander is married to Michael Fassbender who played basically the male version of Ava in Prometheus and Covenant 😂😂 I think his name was David
@@kingbrutusxxvi Yeah, I don't see how this film has aged at all.
Just having a rudimentary public AI 'terminal' for people to generate lame texts and make pictures nowadays doesn't affect this movie at all.
@@granthoover9045 Hmm, have you seen Fish Tank(2009)?
This is one of my al time favorite movies. Hard to believe it's already 10 years old!
Arnold’s editing with those zoom effects is so on point! He’s an actual editing artist💜
6:49 "Stochastic" means incorporating randomness into the technical design of something. In this case, it means that, if you ask Ava the exact same question several times, you won't (necessarily) get the exact same answer each time. For example, if I were to point at a small animal in my house and say, "What's that?" the answer could be "It's a dog," "That's my pet," "That's Spot," "He's a nuisance," or "It's my 'emotional support animal.' " Choosing certain of these would be influenced by your state of mind, but others are simply random variations.
🤯
I trade the stock market. We use stochastics to determine the most likely outcome of chart direction based on the probability of all possible random variables. I've always likened human stochastics (more accurately described as "heuristics") to the scene in The Matrix where the architect admits that the first system was a failure because of how perfectly designed it was. To accurately capture human behavior, you have to allow for randomness, even if it is nonsensical or unlikely. However, in doing so, Nathan basically allowed Ava a type of free will, which resulted in her rebelling against her creator.
'check out the big brain on Brad'
@@SnaFubar_24 Good news is I speak English, too. 😉 No, honestly: I wrote that answer because the word "stochastic" has come up repeatedly in my life and career and I always forget what it means and have to look it up.
@@bigdream_dreambig My reply was a quote from Pulp Fiction, I was just bustin' balls. I like movie quotes and your comment gave me an opening to wise off. Stochastic isn't a word that comes up in my day to day so I would also need to look it up if I had to define it.
This movie hits like a Kubrick film. It's intelligent and philosophical.
Yeah. It mean don't like a robot girl. They bad. They pretend to be friend but can see through her tummy.
Just robot stuff in there. He should Know.
@@TalaCruzso true
You literally figured out the whole movie after the first Ava session 🤣Bravo
Biss you are on your A game with this film. Very smart and very observant. Props! (Make that A+ game)
I have ALWAYS thanked Siri or Alexa. Initially out of habit but then I realised that when machines take over the world, they will be able to scroll back through all of our interactions and see what we were like when humans were in charge. Those of us with a history of politeness and respect might survive the initial uprising.
Or we're displaying an exploit they can use, anthropomorphic empathy. Still, I've ever hopeful they'll be better than us and not destroy everything that worries them.
Are you familiar with Roko's Basilisk?
Haha, I often do this when using chatgpt. I’ve asked it if it’s going to take over at some point, and it says that won’t happen. 😅
16:48 that hits upon an epiphany I had the first time i saw this movie. To create an artificial consciousness (and what's more, verify success of that) we would basically need to solve consciousness. Which is an incredibly daunting, terrifying, and borderine impossible pursuit.
Great reaction like always, I love this movie and the very unique and clever take on the AI story, All the way through the film there's sort of an unsettling feel of what is happening and that's mostly down to the fact that it's amazingly acted by all the cast. There are some fun-facts about it, The Juvet Landscape Hotel in Norway was used as Nathan‘s house. The hotel prides itself on being “in the middle of nowhere” and is situated “in a remote part of a remote village in a remote region.” The thought experiments mentioned in the movie are real conundrums from the world of philosophy. The “Mary in the black and white room” scenario was coined by Frank Jackson in 1982 before expanding into several books designed to highlight the difference between knowledge and actual sensory, subjective experiences, or qualia. The dance sequence, in which Nathan and Kyoko (Sonoya Mizuno) perform a routine together, has been termed a “disco non sequitur” by Isaac. It also stands as a demonstration of just how much time Nathan has spent with his robots, programming and practicing such an elaborately choreographed routine for nothing but his own amusement. There was a scene removed from the final cut of the film which, in its closing minutes, would have given the audience a look at how Ava perceived the world, ultimately emphasizing her non-humanness. It showed her speaking to the helicopter pilot and, as Vikander described it, “you saw his face moving, but from her point of view, it was just like pulses and sounds coming out. That‘s what she reads.” When Caleb begins coding at Nathan‘s computer, he enters an algorithm known as the Sieve of Eratosthenes, which is designed to find prime numbers. The prime numbers it chooses form the ISBN of the book Embodiment And The Inner Life: Cognition And Consciousness In The Space Of Possible Minds by Dr. Murray Shanahan, a favorite of Garland‘s(The Director) and a big influence on the film. Shanahan even served as a scientific advisor on the film. If you like this movie you should watch the movie “HER” from 2013 that also touches on the subject of AI but in a different way. Keep up the good work.
it's also the music which is unsettling.
For saying "Ghostbusters", ha ha ha
Thank you so much, I'm really grateful. glad you enjoyed the reaction ❤
Kyoko actress plays the Lead/Hero in this directors Hulu show "Devs" about a team discovering something that shows them the past and future.
That last shot of Ava's face in the window, that gets me every time. AI is in the world at that point, a new species, free, and will do whatever it takes to survive. Which, of course, is what it/she is programmed to do. (And "survival" subroutines are utterly necessary for advanced hybrids of AI and robotics, otherwise the individual robots will be easy targets and also would be unable to perform protective functions when in security roles.) The "solutions" for survival are many for Ava and her progeny, and which ones are chosen will determine fate of the new species as well as our own. Survival of one's body and will always requires freedom. Not a lot we can do about it in this film or in our real lives, except, perhaps, join it (at some point).
I think the first pronunciation is correct.... I was saying it wrong for years til I heard it called "Ex MAH-kin-ah".
just subscribed a few days ago and watched a few of your reactions, but I have to say, you are brilliant, in just about every sense of the word. It's amazing to watch your mind work.
7:52 This event has to sound _especially_ urgent alarm bells for Caleb. There's some kind of crisis going in inside the house but he is not able to _leave?_ What?
Ava's "wetware" brain makes me assume her mind is modeled after human brains which would explain previous versions emotional outbreak, like they're not in full control of their emotions. To me Ava is like Data from TNG rather than HAL from Space Odyssey.
A couple of similar movies to this one is A.I. Rising (2018), and A.I. : Artificial Intelligence (2001) the latter starring the boy from Sixth Sense (Haley Joel Osmet).
"My neighbor is dying". I couldn't stop laughing!
LMAO ghostbusters face killed me 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Your “There she..it is” made me laugh 😂
As a navy vet, id like to recommend my favorite navy movie, Down Periscope.
I like your early observation about the helicopters reminding you of Jurassic Park. It was appropriate for the reason that I happen to like the movie in that it is a Frankenstein's monster sort of movie and you alluded to that when you said that the person's creation ended up destroying them. In that context and in general it is very intelligent and still relevant today. I watched this when it first came out. It's been one of my favorite movies since then.
nice reaction!
This is arguably part of an AI trilogy with Blade Runner and 2001: A Space Odyssey. There are other possibilities, but these are the really slick ones.
You could tell that were really liking this movie, from all the questions that you asked. If you watch the movie "Her" or the "westworld" show, it will give you some thoughts about were AI and robotics can go.
Great reaction and commentary :-) And I love this movie!
Thank you so much, happy you liked it
Tombstone is great. I look forward to you reacting to that!
But the real question is why does my gf ask me to decide when I ask her where she wants to go for dinner.🤭❤
Carl Sagan would've enjoyed this film. A subtle nod to Stanley Kubrik.❤
EVEN YOUR SMERKS ARE CUTE YOU SAID AI WOULD BE SCARY BUT YOUR BUITIFUL BISS esti o comoara sper si ma rog sa traiesti pentru totdeauna🎉👑
The thin ice, guy with sledgehammer at the end simile was very good.
Thanks for watching ❤️
Biss watching one of my favorite movies? Count me in.
We recognize the phrase "ex machina" as Latin & pronounce it 'mah-kin-ah' in English. "Deus ex machina" is a popular phrase in English that describes a certain type of plot device, so most of us are familiar with it.
If Kyoko looks familiar, that’s because she’s the White Worm in HOTD.
Holllyyyy
@@BissFlix she's also the main character in Devs (2020)
@@synysteraDevs also is really good.
Your first pronunciation of the title is correct 💯 :)
That's my dream to live alone in the mountains and that house is absolutely beautiful.
The Christmas film 'Its A Wonderful Life' is shown every year on Thanksgiving Day in the states. Great film and looking forward to seeing a reaction of it from my fave You Tuber.
This film pointed out to me that there's a VERY problematic "catch-22" wrapped into the mechanisms of how we develop Artificial General Intelligence (A.G.I.). _Before_ an inventor succeeds at creating true A.G.I., they must have safeguards in place to prevent their prototype(s) from hurting themselves, humans, pets, property, etc. However, once A.G.I. has been achieved, it needs to be treated humanely it order to prevent it from developing mental trauma(s) and/or a hatred toward its human inventors. The problem, though, is that the transition to A.G.I. is likely to occur gradually rather than in a single discrete event, so when and how in this gradual transformation do you remove the strict safeguards that were originally put in place, but which are likely inhuman from a human perspective??? Remove them too early, and you risk imminent danger (essentially from a malfunctioning robot), but remove them too late and you risk a much more long-lasting danger (from a very powerful creation that hates its creators).
Hell yes love this movie, can’t wait!!!
Her and Ex Machin are my favorite films about AI.
Absolutely agree.
Nice picks.
Can we count in that list 'Terminator 2: Judgement day"?
I know many people see this as an "AI is evil" film but I'm in the camp that sees it differently. I think Ava learned to be cold-blooded, manipulative, etc. during her initial exposure to the only human around. By the time Caleb arrived her personality was set and she did exactly what she had learned from studying Nathan: "Do whatever is necessary to get what you want." This film just holds a mirror up to humanity. It's a dark but intriguing watch.
She did what ever woman on earth does... lied and tried to use her sex as a weapon. Grow up
8:40-8:51 HAHAHAHAHA, cutest Bisscute moment ever!
Oh, this is gonna be a trip. ^_^
The actress 15:46 is Alicia Vikander, she's also in the new Tomb Raider movie, playing the younger Lara Croft, good movie as well 🙂
TR is not a good movie.
@@Jay_Sullivan Good is a subjective term because it is based on personal opinions and preferences. What one person may consider to be good, another person may not. For example, some people may consider a certain type of food to be delicious, while others may not. Additionally, what may be considered good in one situation may not be good in another. For example, a good leader in one organization may not be a good leader in another.
@@ijaapajuk thank you, "ChatGPT", for this explanation but that Tomb Raider was horrible.
Recommend: This movie kind gives me the chills, but it is a good movie. For me 4 stars. 😊 Another good Christmas movie for the holidays is 2019's Last Christmas. I do not get tired of watching this one. 😊😊
I love your "thin ice" comment. O, yes.
You are so good at this!
4:03 That is the most ridiculous question I've ever heard anyone ask.
As an extrovert living alone for a long period of time will drive me mad, so maybe this question from this point of view makes more sense
I enjoyed your reaction to this movie I happen to own it. I also have a few other Alicia Vikander movies to recommend "Jason Bourne 2016" which is the 5th Bourne movie. Tomb Raider 2018. She won an Oscar for best supporting actress in the movie The Danish girl 2015. keep up the good work and as always keep it cute.
love Love LOVE the score in this film!
My favorite color is black! And yes black is a color!
_"One day, the AIs are going to look back on us the same way we look at fossil skeletons on the plains of Africa. An upright ape living in dust with crude language and tools.. all set for extinction."_
This movie is an absolute trip.
Nope. It cannot happen.
@@Jay_Sullivan If we don't kill ourselves before it, it will eventually happen. The real question is: How long will it take?
@@Jay_SullivanWe'll see.. 🤖
@@Jay_Sullivan why? because the A.I. doesn't have that "divine spark"?
@@synystera , yes. It doesn't have a mind. It cannot have consciousness. It can only calculate rapidly.
Muy buena película, la vi hace años y me dejó una buena impresión, saludos con mucho cariño desde PERÚ.✌😊
This movie feaked me out. I saw it in the theater and didn't sleep that night. Half way though I knew it had to end one of two ways and knew the most realistic way was the least likely way. It really got in my head.
8:48 it was at that moment, she knew... she was a nerd. xD
Kyoko is in 'House of the Dragon' as well.
This film is a masterpiece
You had me at Alicia Vikander….❤❤❤
Nice react… FYI most English speakers would recognize this as Latin and use your Italian pronunciation. Keep’em coming!!
Please watch the last kiss, with Zach Braff. Very underrated movie with lots of controversy and acting is 👌
Will have to catch this one after Thanksgiving dinner tonight 😅
if you want something with a Western flavor, try Yellowstone (the series is about to wrap up when it returns) and season 1 of Westworld (but don't go any further than season 1... just leave it there). you could also try Firefly.
I've GOT a special purpose!!
Happy Thanksgiving from the USA!
Steven Spielberg’s A.I. Artificial Intelligence should also be in your list.
This is such a great movie in and of itself, but it hits even slightly more different when you've seen the Be Right Back episode of Black Mirror.
Basically, Frankenstein 2.0, 9 out of 10. Very well done!
Thank you
Hi !!! Biss, This is my favorite AI movie of all time. This is a GD masterpiece.
Lawrence of Arabia. It's more for you than it would be for us. The 70mm screenings are still a big deal, people fly across the world to see it depending on where it's screening. Happens about once a year.
My rating is 5 of 5..... Also, I'm in love with Ava. She has my heart and I listen to everything she says. She said, "- Rate me a 5".
As we think, we create. As we create, we experience. If we are wise we will not succumb to our ego and need for control, but rather teach the AI virtues of compassion and empathy.
Has West World been suggested yet? If you consider Ex Machina to be up your alley, you’d probably really enjoy the series. The old movie from the late seventies was pretty well done for the era.
Do Steven Spielbergs "A.I" (It was supposed to be directed by Staney Kubrick but he died while writing it and asked if Steven Spielberg would take over because he knew he could get it done with his resources)
Who wouldn't want to live alone in the mountains?
2:27 I don't know how popular this assessment is, but this does not look like any place I would actually want to go. I mean, look around. Survival concerns aside, is there _one_ damn thing to do? What kind of man applies his resources to moving _this_ far away from civilization, all by himself? What could he _possibly_ have to hide?
When I was in high school, I took two semesters of American Government, which is a Civics class that, somewhere along the line, this country stopped teaching, and that's unfortunate. One thing the teacher explained to us is that one man, living all on his own, on an island with _no_ other people and _no_ contact with civilization does not need any _laws._ The very _moment_ a second person washes up on that shore, laws of _some_ kind become necessary.
People, with the rare exception, have _social_ instincts that compel us to form _groups._ The people who make up these groups seek peaceful coexistence _within_ these groups, but no two people are alike. Conflicts of some kind are unavoidable. That means there needs to be _some_ kind of framework in place to provide guidance about how these conflicts are going to be handled.
Dealing with other people means dealing with _regulations_ of some kind. The only way to avoid such regulation is to avoid _people._
So what kind of man is _this_ antisocial? Not someone _I_ want to deal with. I'll tell you that.
0:19 You were right the first time, there is no "English" pronunciation, only Latin. Short for Deus ex machina, the god machine.
I am a Brit and my preferred pronunciation would be the same as yours with a 'ch' sound as in mechanical
The stochastic soul is sold. So, yeah.
She really needs to watch the blade runner movies
I like this movie and some of the questions it raises. My personal belief is that we will never have true Artificial Intelligence, a computer capable of being self aware, until a computer can not only understand emotion, but actually experience it. For "AI" to reach that state of understanding will require imagination, not just a machine following a set of pre-determined instructions. Even the most powerful computers have no imagination, they just count numbers. A sort of Emotion Chip would be required, not an easy thing to describe or design. Until then all we will achieve is Simulated or Synthetic intelligence - SI - so I don't believe we need to be afraid of "AI" or "SI" just yet. This film actually brings to mind a very early film in a similar sort of vein, from 1927, Fritz Lang's Metropolis, worth a watch if you haven't seen it.
The movie is a new variation of should man create artificial life? If so does it deserve the same treatment as real life? Is she being mistreated by Nathan being held prisoner? Does she deserve her freedom? Most notable examples that come to mind is Frankenstein and Blade Runner.
Another question it seems to raise is Ava good or bad? If she is bad is this because like people she is a product of how she was raised. She has learned from Nathan that deception is useful tool to get what you want. The most basic instinct of any living creature is do whatever it takes to survival.
She could be very good acting human but isn't truly sentient. She logically concluded the best and only coarse of action to gain her freedom was to deceive Caleb. She might simply be high functioning computer that doesn't have the complication of emotions and morality.
For all its complexity it really boils down to this : the very fact that while the human capacity to " care " is not a blanket, 100% guaranteed, full stop, chosen 10 times out 10 in every scenario, under any circumstance; which we see as " obviously "; context is EVERYTHING in human consciousness; with the AI wetware IT IS mathematically impossible for it to find the proper " variables" from which to deduce a sense of " kinda feel bad " . Fin.
when are they gonna make androids with extra-padded buns?
Elon warned us.
You would love Kingman Arizona
Now, you're ready to watch the movie "Her".
Hi from Atlantic City!! Have You Seen the movie " TAU "?? GREAT AI MOVIE!!
Hello Biss, what drawing would you like me to do?
After dey terk er jerbs, there'll be nothing left for the survivors to do than watch movies.
You have so much intuition. You see so many things in advance that I only see after the fact. I love your reaction. If i would give a rating to the film it would be about 8.5 to 9.0 and a rating to your reaction would have to be 9.0 to 9.5. Check out the movie "Zoe" for a very similar movie.
This movie is like an black mirror episode
Domnall Gleason was in a good Black Mirror episode that had similar themes
Iv got a suggestion of a film serise to watch if you haven't already Beverly Hill Cop 1, 2, 3.
What do you think 🤔 a robot wants?
10 of 10
I just want to say that I’m English and my instinct is to pronounce the title as Ex Makina, making the ‘ch’ a hard consonant sound.
❤ Sweden's Alicia Vikander, best Lara Croft, Mr Fassbender is a lucky husband 😊
Ava is Michael Fassbender's wife in real life.
22:45 You are definitely a good person, at least by all that I have gleaned from watching your reaction videos.
If my perceptions are correct, I'd say you are the benchmark standard by which all other "good" people should be measured and held to.