Current:Home > Stocks'The Creator' review: Gareth Edwards' innovative sci-fi spectacular is something special -Streamline Finance
'The Creator' review: Gareth Edwards' innovative sci-fi spectacular is something special
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-11 02:12:00
A movie that makes you think about existence and the world around you, explodes your brain with cool visuals and sufficiently blows stuff up? “The Creator” being a sci-fi fan's dream is just science.
Most known for a “Godzilla” movie and the “Star Wars” prequel “Rogue One,” British writer/director Gareth Edwards' best effort was the dynamite 2010 debut “Monsters," a politically themed creature feature/relationship drama. The filmmaker again takes a thought-provoking look at humanity, this time through a futuristic lens with “The Creator” (★★★½ out of four; rated PG-13; in theaters Friday). The moving and eye-popping thriller, starring a never-better John David Washington, dives into the hot-button topic of artificial intelligence but more importantly mankind's tendency toward war and how we treat those different than us.
The film begins with a history lesson about AI in this fictional world, which evolves from being created to help mankind to being blamed for a nuke going off in Los Angeles. In the aftermath, America wants to wipe out all AI and humanoid robots (called “simulants”) while in places like New Asia, man and machine still live side by side in harmony. Conflict breaks out between factions, and the government uses a winged ship of mass destruction called the USS Nomad to seek out and destroy AI bases and allies.
Joshua (Washington) is an undercover special forces agent embedded in an AI-friendly group who watches his pregnant wife Maya (Gemma Chan) seemingly die in an explosion as he was being extracted. Ten years later, he’s on clean-up duty at ground zero of the LA disaster site when he’s recruited by a couple of no-nonsense military types (Allison Janney and Ralph Ineson) for a new mission. A mysterious human scientist nicknamed “Nimrata” is working on an AI superweapon in New Asia that could take out the Nomad and win the war, so eliminating that is the most significant task, yet more intriguing to Joshua is evidence that Maya might actually still be alive.
After his team is dropped in enemy territory, Joshua finds that the target for destruction is actually a little AI girl named Alphie (Madeleine Yuna Voyles). Unable to kill her, he goes rogue with her in tow, and as they end up bonding on an epic journey to meet the enigmatic Nimrata, Joshua discovers Alphie’s power to control and affect mechanical devices and he sees how the other machines view her as a messianic figure.
2023's best movies (so far):The 10 top films, ranked (including 'Barbie' and 'Cassandro')
“The Creator” wears its influences on its sleeve, everything from “Star Wars” to “Akira” to “Apocalypse Now.” At the same time, it also feels extraordinarily original – like the first time you saw “Blade Runner” and when not being wowed by how cool it was, you wondered if Harrison Ford was human or android.
Edwards’ spectacle feels similar: He’s exquisitely crafted a mostly Asian-infused landscape that feels sort of alien, a little familiar and completely immersive, featuring soldiers with boxy machine heads and bizarre walking bombs with mechanical arms and legs. All of that stunning novelty exists alongside Washington and Voyles' strong chemistry together as a man and a robotic child growing closer, navigating hostiles and obstacles, and having deep discussions about life, like who goes to heaven and who doesn’t.
Religion is very much another human theme that Edwards explores in “The Creator.” While the movie touches on modern concerns about robots replacing us, it’s more a metaphor here for outsiders and differing belief systems in an ambitious narrative that hurls a lot at its audience in two hours and 13 minutes. A flurry of flashbacks doesn't always help momentum, some twists lean predictable and a few narrative threads are wrapped up a little too neatly, though nothing too heinous distracts from the film's more emotional and rousing moments.
This is a tale that could only be written by flesh and blood, not ChatGPT, and Edwards is all about reaching the hearts and minds of those who love next-level sci-fi.
AI in Hollywood:Can it really replace actors? It already has.
veryGood! (42667)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Andrea Bocelli and son Matteo release stirring Oscars version of 'Time to Say Goodbye'
- Chris Evans and Wife Alba Baptista Make Marvelous Red Carpet Debut at Vanity Fair Oscars Party
- Surreal April 2024 total solar eclipse renews debunked flat Earth conspiracy theories
- Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
- Florida rivals ask courts to stop online sports gambling off tribal lands
- Emily Blunt and Ryan Gosling's Hilariously Frosty Oscars Confrontation Reignites Barbenheimer Battle
- Oscar documentary winner Mstyslav Chernov wishes he had never made historic Ukraine film
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Cry a River Over Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel’s Perfect Vanity Fair Oscars Party Date Night
Ranking
- How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
- Lindsay Lohan Is So Fetch at Vanity Fair Oscars After-Party for First Time in Over a Decade
- When is Eid Al-Fitr? When does Ramadan end? Here's what to know for 2024
- Royal Expert Omid Scobie Weighs in On Kate Middleton Photo Controversy
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Caitlin Clark needs a break before NCAA tournament begins
- List of winners so far at the 2024 Oscars
- Victims of Catholic nuns rely on each other after being overlooked in the clergy sex abuse crisis
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Andrea Bocelli and son Matteo release stirring Oscars version of 'Time to Say Goodbye'
This Is the single worst reason to claim Social Security early
Alexis Bledel Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance at Elton John AIDS Foundation's Oscars 2024 Party
Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
Royal Expert Omid Scobie Weighs in On Kate Middleton Photo Controversy
Robert Downey Jr. wins supporting actor and his first Oscar for ‘Oppenheimer’
Why Robert Downey Jr. Looked Confused by Jimmy Kimmel's Penis Joke at the 2024 Oscars