Your Company
 

The Machine

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom · 2013
Rated R · 1h 32m
Director Caradog W. James
Starring Caity Lotz, Toby Stephens, Denis Lawson, Sam Hazeldine
Genre Science Fiction, Thriller

In the midst of a new Cold War with China, the Ministry of Defense recruits brilliant programmer Vincent to put artificial intelligence to use as a weapon. However, when Vincent creates a robot known as the Machine based on a dead researcher, he realizes the demands of the military don't account for the robot's personality.

Stream The Machine

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

60

Time Out London by Anna Smith

The characters could use more depth – Vincent’s backstory is told too swiftly, and his bonding with Ava is brief. But it’s still a smart, thought-provoking little thriller with strong central performances.

50

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Closer to “Her” in its musing on human/machine connectivity, while also incorporating the dystopian and action-thriller aspects of “Blade Runner” and its ilk, albeit on a much smaller scale, the pic will divide fantasy fans, some of whom will give it props for breaking somewhat from genre formula, while others will be disappointed by the largely budgetary limits of its imagination.

58

The Playlist by Gabe Toro

When Lotz is not onscreen, Stephens is miserable company. But James does reveal a deep fascination with the robotics that suggests the threadbare story was a chance for him to explore the very real advances in artificial intelligence.

60

Total Film by Matt Glasby

Despite some striking imagery and sterling FX work, Welsh writer/director Caradog W James’ expert use of limited resources doesn’t stretch as far as the subtlety-averse script.

50

Village Voice by Nick Schager

If the proceedings prove far too familiar, director Caradog W. James delivers a few striking images... as well as a sinister cautionary-tale finale made all the more unsettling by its use of a sterling John Carpenter-style synthesizer score.

70

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

Even with a cut-and-dried approach to characterization and the issue of man-made consciousness, The Machine percolates with an elegantly palpable sense of wonder and danger.

Users who liked this film also liked