Tag Archives: artificial intelligence

Mercy (2026) Movie Review

If Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie was an early contender for funniest comedy of the year, Mercy presents a curious bit of counter-programming: an early contender for the unintentionally funniest comedy of the year.

Leaning on the utterly toothless performance of Chris Pratt, who spends the majority of the movie strapped to a chair, Mercy serves the terrible reputation of January new releases well. In the film, Pratt plays the hero, Chris Raven: a sad-sack homicide detective who has relapsed into alcoholism and is abusive to his wife. After a night he can’t remember, Raven awakes to an experimental AI (which takes on the image of a steely Rebecca Ferguson) being used to adjudicate crime, a literal judge, jury, and execution with unilateral power to kill the accused if the defendant cannot prove reasonable doubt.

In this near future, accused criminals are guilty until proven innocent, and have been stripped of the constitutional right to a jury of one’s peers. Raven, who ironically helped send people to this AI execution chair, now finds himself Continue reading Mercy (2026) Movie Review

An In-Depth Analysis of Sunspring (2016), The Short Film Written By A Computer

Note: Spoilers for Sunspring are in this in-depth review. The video is embedded below if you want to watch before you read.

 

In Sunspring, director Oscar Sharp engages in a cinematic experiment. The goal: to create an award-worthy short film using a script written by an artificial intelligence. The result: glorious sci-fi chaos. Feeding the A.I. with dozens of science fiction script .txt files and a series of prompts given for a sci-fi filmmaking competition, the small cast and crew used the resulting script to shoot the short in one day.

“In a future with mass unemployment, young people are forced to sell blood,” Thomas Middleditch’s H begins, upon pulling a book out of a drawer and thumbing through it. “It’s something I could do.”

This is perhaps the most Continue reading An In-Depth Analysis of Sunspring (2016), The Short Film Written By A Computer