This article is an exact explanation of the movie I-Robot. The robots loved us, and didn't want us to hurt ourselves so they take over the world because humans are self destructive.
When robots finally take over the world (assuming they haven't already) we will not be able to say we weren't warned. Every year, Hollywood studios present dire scenarios in which androids, computers and artificial-intelligence applications run amok and enslave the human race, but the public never seems to get the message. Perhaps ''I, Robot,'' a hectic, half-baked science-fiction thriller that opens today nationwide, will succeed where the ''Terminator'' and ''Matrix'' movies failed, and alert us to the grave danger that our innocent-looking toasters, vacuum cleaners, smart cars and laptop computers really pose.
5 comments:
Oh come on people this stuff is gold.
Why did they hire a stalker programmer?
Robot war? I'm not seeing it. More like excessive affection -- quite the opposite.
This article is an exact explanation of the movie I-Robot. The robots loved us, and didn't want us to hurt ourselves so they take over the world because humans are self destructive.
I get it. From the movie review by AO Scott:
When robots finally take over the world (assuming they haven't already) we will not be able to say we weren't warned. Every year, Hollywood studios present dire scenarios in which androids, computers and artificial-intelligence applications run amok and enslave the human race, but the public never seems to get the message. Perhaps ''I, Robot,'' a hectic, half-baked science-fiction thriller that opens today nationwide, will succeed where the ''Terminator'' and ''Matrix'' movies failed, and alert us to the grave danger that our innocent-looking toasters, vacuum cleaners, smart cars and laptop computers really pose.
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