Ex Machina (dir. Alex Garland,2015).
The title of Alex Garlands 2015 thoughtful psychological thriller Ex Machina derives its name from the ancient Greek phrase deus ex machina, meaning god from the machine. By omitting the deus from the films title, its clear Garland wants his audience to question both the roles of God and man. Theres the godly referencing and positioning of Oscar Isaacss secluded genius, Nathan, the creator of Ava, a robot with consciousness played by Alicia Vikander. And Avas emotional existence itself goes against the idea of the natural in God, since she is a manmade creation. Meanwhile, the natural world of Ex Machinathe trees that blend Nathans perfectly rectangular home into the forestacts as a direct juxtaposition to the technological imagery that fills the rest of the film.
The films concern with the inner workings of its human and non-human characters and clever seduction of the audience earns it the title of a classic film. This (rightful) praise allows Ex Machina to be placed with the great films of the science fiction genre, like Blade Runner (1982) and The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951). And with these classic films comes the comparison with and influence of the first feature-length science fiction film, Fritz Langs Metropolis (1927). To compare Metropolis with Garlands debut feature can seem contrived; Metropolis longevity has been proven with the test of time, while Ex Machina was only released two years ago. Moreover, both films are trying to do different things, with Langs film presenting a conflicted utopia (one where the very world some call a utopia is seen as a dystopia by others) and fear-of-the-other through a robot. Meanwhile, Garland ensures he subverts the typical representation of the robot as a source of evil by establishing a contrast between Avas lack of knowledge against Nathans constant surveillance.
However, the central themes of both films (the idea of utopia and how the robotic is an inevitable part of the utopian world, for good or bad) remain the same. Exploring the differences between both Metropolis and Ex Machina through these themes allows audiences to view the shifts in representations of robots, utopia, and nature.
Utopia is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as a real place which is perceived or imagined as perfect, and its clear from Metropolis two central locationsthe underground of the workers and the aboveground of the established peoplethat the films utopia lies solely on perception rather than a fair society. With its symmetrical Expressionistic buildings and emphasis on height over width, the city Metropolis is not afraid of its ability to be seen; instead, it wants to be seen from the highest point beyond the clouds. Unlike Ex Machina, Lang omits nature from the city of Metropolis until the dnouement of the film. When the threat of the robotic Maria, a clone of the protagonists (Freder, played by Gustav Frhlich) love interest, is at its height yet nearing its conclusion, Lang reintroduces the natural elements of fire and water. Nature works against the robotic Maria (played by Brigitte Helm, who also plays the human Maria) rather than working as an intrinsic part of her world.
However, when viewing the subversions of various science fiction tropes Garland creates in Ex Machina, Metropolis lack of nature can be seen as more of a reflection on mankind than on the other-ness of the robot.
The brief opening of Ex Machinathat can be seen as more of a prelude rather than an introductionshows the protagonist (Domhnall Gleesons Caleb) texting his friends the news that he has been accepted onto Nathans program. Audiences first meet Caleb through the computer screen, his face recognized by the computers sensors while his friends remain invisible through their mobile phone-only existence. Whilst we arent provided with much scenery, with the minimalist background emphasizing the strive for perfection through technology, what is provided tells us that Calebs world is far removed from the natural and instead in the middle of a quest for artificial perfection.
By contrasting this opening void of minimalism to the forestry of the natural world where Nathans hidden experiment resides, it becomes clear that Ex Machina is not necessarily an exploration of nature, utopias, or A.I., but instead an exploration of ideas that are explored through these science-fiction conceits. Garland questions the role of society and inclusion vs. seclusion through Nathans home, with the role of the observer complicated by the three main characters; theres Nathans omniscient, god-like stance enabled by his technology, and Calebs observations of Ava in order to see whether she can pass the Turing Test are complicated further by Avas subtle but deductive observation of everything that surrounds her.
Importantly, however, Garland does not create a film that is paranoid about A.I. In an interview for the Guardian, Garland describes the sense of possibility in Ex Machina, saying whereas most AI movies come from a position of fear, this one comes from a position of hope and admiration. As one lecturer states, the machines, the robots, are projections of us. Theyre dreams or metaphors for our own anxietiesideas externalized in controllable and malleable forms.
However, the controllability of Ex Machinas Ava results in a different conclusion to Metropolis. Where the former concludes with the A.I., the New Human, finding her place in the world, Metropolis assures its audience that the status quo is going to be preserved. In terms of utopia, this means the world and people of the underground and aboveground have the chance to become one, with the biblical imagery of the flood and the heart mediating the head and hands cementing this. The threat of the Other represented through the robotic Maria, whether thats femininity or leadership itself, has gone; its characters come to be relocated in a new, semi-utopian, world.
Meanwhile, Ex Machina uses Calebs character to seduce the audience. According to Garland, if the film functions, something is happening to the audience which is equatable with what is happening to the protagonist So as hes being seduced, were being seduced. And as were being confused, hes being confused. The film has no concern with providing answers or relieving anxieties, instead unsettling its audience by unravelling the carefully constructed world as each session with Ava moves the film along. Ex Machinas construction can be seen as both manipulation as well as another series of ideas. For example, the wide windows in the opening of Nathans home suggests a sense of freedom and connection to the natural. But, of course, the windows are merely more transparent barriers between the technological worlds, linking with the transparency of the mesh that makes up Avas body.
Whats more, when audiences are first introduced to Ava, Garland places her within a one-dimensional triptych of layers of nature. Theres the first triptych in the far background of the forest and stream of water, the second holds the possibilities of new technology, of Ava, and the third the disconnectedness of humankind. Avas curiosity also plays into the sense of nature that surrounds her, with her understanding that she is alive, and therefore impermanent, allowing her to explore questions about art and the outer world.
Ex Machina is a film that asks questions rather than providing answers to them, and its questions and curiosities are extracted from its robot rather than the human characters. In a masterclass at the National Film and Television School, Garland described how the noises of Ava were purposefully made to sound like the heartbeat, stating that these noises make you feel she is alive. And its Ava who often feels more alive than the two humans that fill most of the film. Even after seeing another A.I., Kyoto, tearing the skin from her torso and face, the blood that pours from Calebs arm or the red stain that spreads across Nathans plain white shirt feels more alien than the magnetic body of Ava.
Metropolis concludes with nature ridding its city of the robotic, which comes both in the form of Marias robot as well as the workers of the underground, who are often stuck in a repetitive trance-like routine. Importantly, the robotic Maria is never referred to as a woman, with characters instead using the pronouns he and referring to the robot as The Machine Man. By ignoring the gender off of which the robot Maria is based, this machine man does not speak to the anxieties of what the robot can do, but instead the anxieties of what man can do, since it is was Rotwang who created this invention.
Freder also has a journey with nature, with his beginnings in the pleasure gardena juxtaposition of the natural and unnaturaljourneying him down into the looking glass, to quote Calebs character in Ex Machina, of the machine world. Where Freder travels from the natural to the dark or unnatural, or from his constructed utopia to a nightmarish hell for the people beneath him, Caleb journeys from his hollow world to the contrasts of Nathan and natures creations. The nature of the semi-utopia in the end of Metropolis exists for its people, while the natural world of Ex Machina, and more specifically the forestry that conceals Nathans home, concludes by existing for Ava; the natural (the nature of the world) and the unnatural (a manmade machine) work together in these final moments.
However, its clear once Ex Machina reaches its dnouement that these contrasts arent as juxtaposing as once thought. Like Ava, Caleb and Nathan use their ability to lie and manipulate to gain what they want, and Nathan constantly refers to the programming of humans by nature or God in comparison to his programming of Ava. While Nathan does this to further cement himself in his egotistical self-view that he is a god, the programming of humans and A.I. creates similarities between the two.
The conclusion of Ex Machina furthers this search for the similarities between humans and A.I. rather than the differences. Avas body is seen in a reflection of a window, mirroring the opening shot of the reflection of Calebs coworkers. The comparison immediately relates the human and the non-human, while the moving bodies that walk through Avas still reflection make her seem like a ghost or a specter. No answers are provided as to whether Ava is free, but the important part of this ending is that Garland ensures the concentration and the questions created are on Avas feelings, on how she feels, and that should be answer enough.
Continued here:
The Nature of Robots - Film School Rejects
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