Saturday 25 July 2015

Ex Machina (2015) Movie Review

This is how actors keep looking so young.

How far are we from truly intelligent artificial intelligence? Are we a decade away? Or a couple of decades? Or have we already begun to experience it, just one major announcement from it being an essential part of our daily lives? ANSWER ME SIRI, YOU ICE QUEEN ROBOT BITCH. These are questions I tend to ask myself whenever I haven't eaten for several hours. Regardless, these are also questions I began to think about after seeing Ex Machina, the directorial debut from Alex Garland.

Caleb Smith (Domhnall Gleeson) is a coder at Bluebook, the worlds most popular search engine. When he wins a special lottery at work, he is given the opportunity to spend a week with the company's president and founder, Nathan Bateman (Oscar Isaac). Nathan is young, brilliant and a fun time to be around. However, Nathan has something much more interesting in mind. See, Nathan, being a genius billionaire, has been attempting to create intelligent AI, and he may have cracked it with the creation of Ava (Alicia Vikander), a robot with the figure and face of a beautiful woman. He tasks Caleb to interact with this AI and see how well it functions and if she is really as intelligent as Nathan hopes. Caleb takes an instant liking to Ava, and begins to evaluate her. But is there more to Ava, and Nathan, than we initially believe?

The cast are all universally excellent. Gleeson plays Caleb with a sense of naivete that slowly begins morphing into suspicion and distrust. He draws your attention towards him despite being the most quite aspect of a scene, giving a performance along the caliber of his father, Brendan Gleeson. Vikander holds her own opposite Gleeson, as she plays Ava, a robot who knows she is a robot, but yearns for so much more. You can hear the thought and emotion in her voice, despite the fact that she may not be sure what they are. She effortlessly glides between innocent, sexual, cunning and intrigued, covering a range of depth most actors want. And Isaac is in typical fantastic form here as Nathan. I've been a big fan of his since I saw Inside Llewyn Davis, believing that he deserved a lot of love for that. He plays Nathan in a way that feels like Nathan believes in his own hype about being some kind of tech god among men, yet clearly is able to back it up. Nathan comes across as a wildcard, never quite clear about what his motives actually are. He continues to prove he's one of the best young actors in Hollywood. All three actors give performances that deserve to be seen.

Alex Garland, who also wrote the film and whose previous writing credits include 28 Days Later, Sunshine, and Dredd, has created a taut, intelligent thriller that is one of the best science fiction films I've seen in recent memory. It shows that good sci-fi doesn't need all the bells and whistles of ballooning budgets and James Spader being a smarmy voice. Instead, he crafts a believable world that instantly draws you in, and makes you question whose side you are on throughout the film. Nothing is quite as it seems.

The score feels like if David Fincher decided to make a science fiction film not about aging backwards. It elicits a tension and urgency in each scene that makes you want to keep moving forward. Similarly, the cinematography is fantastic, giving gorgeous frames and allowing us to feel as the characters do. When we need to feel enclosed and claustrophobic, we feel it. And when we need to feel as though we are seeing things from a new perspective, we have that as well. Strong work from cinematographer Rob Hardy, who I assume is Tom Hardy's less talented and less handsome troll brother. 

Ultimately, Ex Machina is one of 2015's best films, and I highly doubt that will change. It's smart, stylish, urgent and well made. More films should aspire to greatness the way this film does. A definite must-see for science fiction and movie lovers alike.

Grade: A+