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The archive movie
The archive movie









the archive movie

It’s also because some women have to tear each other down or lose themselves to prove their love, right to the point of self-destruction.*EDIT: I just saw this a 2nd time. It’s more because she’s jealous and insecure, ready to destroy her competition even if the competition is related to her in some strange way. It has nothing to do with how apparently this Archive process was done against her consent or what it might mean to override a sentient feeling robot with dreams of its own (hello, “Blade Runner”!) with another entity. And when the second prototype goes HAL 9000-levels of jealousy and tries to sabotage the whole experiment? It's predictable and tired. They each have varying degrees of his wife in them somehow, so I guess that makes them sister wives. There’s also the issue that George christens them all sisters and tries to get them to unite for the purpose of bringing Jules back. There are other befuddling gaps in the script, including when an actor has to say this gem in a very serious manner: “I’m a risk assessor. But it seems like a weird design flaw in the story not to create models like the one you’re looking for in the first place. Sure, there’s a moment when George explains that it’s the third prototype’s brain power that convinced him she’s the one to carry his wife’s being. The second looks something like the ASIMO robot, and acts like a petulant child when his attentions move on to creating a more humanoid version, which of course, is smaller, skinnier, and more conventionally attractive. The first attempt left him with a lumbering gentle giant much like a toddler who can’t speak. George is mostly alone except for the three robotic prototypes he created to save his wife’s essence. Here is where things get a little uncomfortable.

the archive movie

In a sense, George is a mad scientist trying to resurrect the dead through science and technology, going through several prototypes in the process for his perfect companion like in “Ex Machina.” The unforgettable wave of grief, ghost visitations from his wife and the movie’s inescapable sense of loneliness owes much to the Russian classic, “Solaris.” Plus, some robot designs from “ Star Wars” and “Metropolis” are thrown into a narrative mix of “ Ex Machina” meets “Solaris.” The themes of those latter two movies are certainly prevalent. The question each viewer will have to answer for themselves is if can they get past the movie’s male fantasy aspect for that final reveal.ĭebut writer/director Rothery, who comes from the art department world, draws from various sci-fi movies to create the forlorn look of “Archive.” Its influences can be traced back to movies like “2001: A Space Odyssey,” or “ Blade Runner” in the way it blends American characters against the backdrop of a Japanese restaurant and big light-up ads. Then, it unravels them with the last few minutes, and it’s those last few minutes that changed my perception. In its attempt to create conflict, it dips into sexist tropes that diminish the story. The plot twists are many, and so are the cliches. Gavin Rothery’s “Archive” is a somewhat unwieldy sci-fi thriller to get into.

the archive movie

Unfortunately, that brings out the jealousy in one of the other robots and the suspicions of the company behind Archive who don’t seem thrilled about George’s data breach to create his version of Frankenstein’s monster. Time is running out before she will go silent forever, and in his spare time, George works on his third prototype to house her personality for a chance at resurrection. He finds some comfort away from work talking to his dead wife, Julie ( Stacy Martin), through the Archive, a “ 2001: A Space Odyssey”-looking monolith turned casket that allows the living to talk to the dead for a few more hours. As George returns from a brisk run, he greets the two robots he built for company and checks in with his curt boss, Simone ( Rhona Mitra). It is an unwelcoming concrete palace, as cold on the inside as the weather outside-like a spaceship plopped on another planet. Deep in a snow-covered forest in Japan, George ( Theo James) is on a lonely mission to restart a decommissioned base.











The archive movie