You’d assume {that a} sci-fi film the place Jennifer Lopez companions with a smart-ass, sentient mech go well with to battle in opposition to her evil AI brother can be slightly extra enjoyable. Alas, Atlas — Netflix’s newest try at a success streaming motion film — takes itself far too severely. It additionally fails to essentially dig into the complexities of the AI debate, regardless of basically being a battle between a pleasant AI assistant and machine intent on a doomsday situation. There are some humorous moments, notably the banter between Lopez and her mechanical companion, however each different a part of the film appears to be preventing in opposition to Atlas’ true type. It is a buddy comedy attempting too arduous to be a severe motion flick.
Atlas takes place virtually three many years after an rebellion that noticed a sophisticated AI bot named Harlan (Simu Liu) assist liberate different machines, who then proceeded to bypass their safety protocols and begin a struggle with humanity. It’s a setup that echoes loads of real-world issues. Besides, on this case, the AIs lose, and Harlan heads off-planet to lick his wounds — however not earlier than issuing an ominous risk to the human inhabitants. Atlas (Lopez), the daughter of Harlan’s creator who basically grew up with him as a sibling, spends the following 28 years attempting to find exactly the place Harlan went so the risk could be eradicated for good. The film kicks off when she discovers that location after interrogating the severed head of an AI henchman.
Crucial factor you should learn about Atlas is that she has grown to completely detest AI and, by extension, most futuristic tech. She has the identical fears many people do (together with sci-fi characters like Will Smith in I, Robotic), that are exacerbated by the truth that the tech round her could be hacked and exploited by Harlan and his associates. At one level, whereas briefing a bunch of troopers, she says, “You may’t belief AI,” whereas handing out plans printed on paper.
This concern extends notably to a tool known as a Neural Hyperlink (to not be confused with the Elon Musk-backed Neuralink), which lets a human thoughts join on to an AI companion. It’s a cool thought, however the film by no means slows down sufficient to discover it in depth. Inevitably, Atlas finds herself with no alternative however to make use of a Neural Hyperlink to hook up with an AI named Smith (Gregory James Cohan) who appears similar to Siri and is housed within a mech go well with ripped proper out of Titanfall.
Contrived because it is likely to be, the connection between Smith and Atlas is definitely the perfect a part of the film. Atlas is cranky and sarcastic, and due to his adaptive studying capabilities, Smith quickly turns into precisely the identical. The AI swears and makes jokes, dishing it out to Atlas the identical means she does to him. The banter is genuinely humorous, to the purpose that, despite the fact that you possibly can see it coming a mile away, their inevitable friendship nonetheless feels touching. It’s virtually price watching the entire film only for its heartwarming finale.
The issue with Atlas isn’t a lot that it’s predictable (although that doesn’t assist, nor does its painfully generic imaginative and prescient of a sci-fi future). It’s that the film doesn’t lean into this energy. Exterior of Smith and Atlas, every thing else about Atlas is self-serious and uninteresting. Harlan is the largest offender, performed with a stilted impact by Liu that makes him extra boring than scary. In a future the place AI bots can mimic human beings completely, it’s confounding that probably the most superior machine appears like an outdated GPS giving instructions. Total, there’s loads of wasted potential. Specifically, the film’s premise is an ideal framing for present AI debates — Siri vs. Skynet — however doesn’t take the chance to say something new.
There are already loads of latest films that discover a possible AI future with a heavy dose of sincerity, whether or not it’s The Creator, Lifeless Reckoning, and even Netflix’s personal Jung_E. Atlas provides nothing to that in depth physique of labor. Even worse, it fails to capitalize on its one defining side. The comedic moments are the perfect a part of the film, and but they’ll really feel misplaced buried underneath every thing else. Atlas was an opportunity to take an pressing AI dialog and discover it in an approachable Hollywood bundle. It may’ve been enjoyable and sensible — as an alternative, like loads of AI proper now, it’s neither.
Atlas begins streaming on Netflix on Might twenty fourth.