The Creator (5/10)
Well this was a letdown.
This movie, to say the least, isn't good. In fact, it almost ended up in "bad" (4/10) territory if not for the ending sequence just putting it over the line. It's an action movie where the action isn't that good, that's interspaced with attempts at intelligence, but really isn't saying anything about anything.
The film takes place in/around 2070, but this is the result of divergence that occurred at some point in the 20th century, where AI/robotics technology took off and didn't stop, to the point that by 2065, robots were integrated into human life seemlessly. The AI in this film is basically divided between "bots" (bi-pedal robots that are obviously robots) and simulants (androids that look and sound human but clearly aren't). Things went awry when in 2065, AI took control of NOMAD (North American Mobile Air Defence - basically a giant warship in low Earth orbit that can rain death anywhere on the planet) and nuked Los Angeles (we later learn what really happened). Thus, the US went techno-phobic and is now waging a war on "New Asia" where humans and AIs live in peace.
If that sounds interesting, good for you. Problem is, none of what I just said really results in payoff. I could give a plot summary but don't have the time or inclination, and really, the plot itself is little to write home about. People have made comments about The Creator being derivative of other works, and while that's undoubtedly true, I feel this criticism is missing the forest for the trees. A derivative work isn't inherently an inferior one, and sci-fi is trope heavy regardless. No, the problem I have is that The Creator doesn't really have anything to say about anything despite its wealth of subject matter.
Is it a film about AI? If so, its message is "AI is like us, deal with it." A bit glib, but it produces nothing new on the subject of AI that hasn't been explored before, and it doesn't even do that compelling a job of exploring it in of itself. Blurred lines between humans and machines, questions about souls, afterlife, etc., yes, it's here, but it's not doing anything new with it. Considering how much of an issue AI is right now, I was a bit surprised to see the film unambiguously have "good" AI with "good" human allies, against "evil" humans (as a side note, there's no moral grey areas in this film - the US is unambiguously the bad guys, New Asia unambiguously the good guys, to the extent that I'm surprised there hasn't been outcry about the film being "woke").
Maybe it isn't about AI then? Daren Mooney has suggested that the film is a Vietnam war analogy, and while I disagree with him on most things, I think he has the right of it...sort of. The film undoubtedly lifts imagery from the Vietnam War (low tech guerilla fighters against high tech American forces) and whatnot, but nothing is here beyond window dressing. There's no comparative scenario to the Vietnam War in ideology, the film has nothing beyond "bad guys are bad guys, good guys fight back." I've seen it suggested that in the film, the US's anti-AI crusade is just a front to invade "New Asia," but if so, there's nothing to suggest that. If the film is meant to be a Vietnam War analogy, again, I don't know what it's trying to say beyond window dressing.
This also extends to the worldbuilding, which makes little sense. It's a weird choice to have the POD in the mid-20th century, but also by the 2070s have a world that could be our own in the future, with little to bridge the divide. And "New Asia" is, as far as I can tell, a conglomeration of states in SE Asia that includes Vietnam, Cambodia, etc., but there's no real info given on it. It has high-tech megacities that clearly answer to a functioning government, with low-tech country regions that look like something from the mid 20th century. How "New Asia" feels about US forces operating unilaterally within its borders is never really explained, nor is there sign of any proper response to it beyond police forces. I'm assuming "New Asia" was chosen in order to be apolitical, to not involve real Asian countries, but if so, it's apolitical to the point of rediculousness because the worldbuilding is so vague.
Is NOMAD an allagory for drone warfare? A US warship firing down from the clouds with impunity? If so, again, it doesn't have anything to say about anything. NOMAD looks cool (heck, most of the military tech looks cool, such as a 'mega tank' that's seen), but again, it's window dressing. Point is, every possible theme I've cited has a better film somewhere else that explores these themes and does so better.
So, fine. Themes are sparse, worldbuilding is silly, what about plot, character, and storytelling. Well, not to spoil anything, but it's nothing special. Special agent Joshua Mitchell falls in love with enemy woman, desparate to get back to her, learns that humans were the monsters all along (or rather America was, whatever), meets kid robot, cue road trip, cue lots (and lots) of shooting (and even more shooting), and yeah, it didn't do much. None of the characters are that compelling, and it's well worn tropes. Basically, every idea in sci-fi was thrown together in a blender, this is what we got.
Not a bad film, but an utter letdown. I'd frankly be astonished if we're even talking about it after one year. Original IPs are great, but they have to be, y'know, GOOD, in order to leave an impression.