‘Ex Machina’ is a stylish, thoughtful thriller

  • By Colin Covert Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
  • Friday, April 24, 2015 10:31am
  • LifeGo-See-Do

“Ex Machina” is a tense tale of artificial love so intelligently crafted and edgy that I adored it myself. It juxtaposes several kinds of stories like a Chinese puzzle. It’s a coherent, suspenseful film noir battle of wills, and a beauty vs. beast gender fable. It’s an eerie futurist boy-meets-girl story, and a stylish psychological thriller.

Juggling these scenarios is sci-fi novelist/screenwriter Alex Garland, who scripted Danny Boyle’s stunning “28 Days Later” and “Sunshine.” This film, visually awesome yet never swamped by its special effects, gives Garland an equally impressive directorial debut.

It opens in an era not so far from where we are today, a confusing time of economic, technical and ethical upheaval. Nathan Bateman, the self-involved CEO of a Google-like global Web crawler, runs every aspect of life that he can claim like a program he personally designed. Brilliant and overbearing, he has retreated to a fortress of solitude, a soulless retreat somewhere cool and far from sight.

Powerful as Nathan is, he needs his apprentice Caleb, a boyish, sensitive 26-year-old programmer, to test his latest creation, a sentient, talking robot. Caleb, meet Ava. She — it? — is a polite android of stunning physical beauty and emotional charisma.

How might such a technology ripple out into the real world? Caleb’s assignment is to study Ava with the famous Turing Test, determining if the machine’s behavior equals an alert human’s. “If that test is passed,” Nathan says, “you are dead center of the greatest scientific event in the history of man.” “If you’ve created a conscious machine,” Caleb replies, “it’s not the history of man. That’s the history of gods.” It’s a comment Nathan likes a lot.

The cast includes Oscar Isaac, Domhnall Gleeson and Alicia Vikander, each playing a rich, clever, three-dimensional part. Vikander’s Ava seems less a menacing presence than Isaac’s shady but honest Nathan. With eyes wide open and disturbingly blank, he may have become a demented genius like “Apocalypse Now’s” Col. Kurtz. Gleeson’s Caleb, in his way as isolated as Nathan, is pushed by Nathan and pulled by Ava. (Gleeson and Vikander are perfect as the couple; they played socially awkward man and beautiful wife in “Anna Karenina.”) Which of them demonstrates real humanity, and who is winning the three-level chess match of their mind games, are questions that grow more unpredictable in each beautifully composed scene.

Can we evolve as well as Ava Vikander moves with such balletic grace that the quiet whirring of her gears hardly intrudes. She seems just as innocent as Caleb appears to be painfully human, examining the seductive waif each day with growing tenderness. She asks, “What happens to me if I fail the test?” When Caleb replies, “It’s not up to me,” Ava responds, “Why is it up to anyone?”

Garland makes us wonder if artificial intelligence is a bigger threat than the artifice of human beings. Which is more able to empathize Much of the action takes place in Nathan’s facility, which echoes the sterile, icy feeling of Kubrick’s “2001,” but several scenes of light shining across trees near the remote retreat evoke Terrence Malick, implying that nature thrived before humans appeared, and may outlive us, too.

“Ex Machina”

Rating: R, for graphic nudity, language, sexual references and some violence

Showing: Alderwood Mall, Everett Stadium, Marysville, Meridian, Oak Tree, Sundance Cinemas Seattle, Woodinville, Cascade Mall

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Penny Clark, owner of Travel Time of Everett Inc., at her home office on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 in Arlington, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
In a changing industry, travel agents ‘so busy’ navigating modern travel

While online travel tools are everywhere, travel advisers still prove useful — and popular, says Penny Clark, of Travel Time in Arlington.

(Daniel Berman for The Washington Post)
The Rick Steves guide to life

The longtime Edmonds resident is trying to bring a dash of the Europe he loves to south Snohomish County.

Travis Furlanic shows the fluorescent properties of sulfur tuft mushrooms during a Whidbey Wild Mushroom Tour at Tilth Farmers Market on Saturday, April 27, 2024 in Langley, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
On Whidbey Island, local fungi forager offers educational mushroom tours

Every spring and fall, Travis Furlanic guides groups through county parks. His priority, he said, is education.

Bright orange Azalea Arneson Gem in flower.
Deciduous azaleas just love the Pacific Northwest’s evergreen climate

Each spring, these shrubs put on a flower show with brilliant, varied colors. In fall, their leaves take center stage.

Music, theater and more: What’s happening in Snohomish County

The Grand Kyiv Ballet performs Thursday in Arlington, and Elvis impersonators descend on Everett this Saturday.

An example of delftware, this decorative plate sports polychrome blooms

Delft is a type of tin-glazed earthenware pottery born in Holland. This 16th century English piece sold for $3,997 at auction.

Great Plant Pick: Dwarf Purpleleaf Japanese Barberry

What: Dwarf Purpleleaf Japanese Barberry, or berberis thunbergii f. atropurpurea Concorde, was… Continue reading

Spring plant sales in Snohomish County

Find perennials, vegetable starts, shrubs and more at these sales, which raise money for horticulture scholarships.

Byzantine mosaics
With its beautiful Byzantine mosaics, Ravenna only gets better with age

Near Italy’s Adriatic coast, it was the westernmost pillar of the Byzantine Empire and a flickering light in the Dark Ages.

Artist Libby Hammer picks through bits and pieces collected from Whidbey Island beaches recently at her home in Oak Harbor. (Sam Fletcher / Whidbey News-Times)
Whidbey Island artist collects beach rubble to make Ragamuffin’s Rock Art

Libby Hammer got her start with wood in Tacoma. After moving to Oak Harbor, she shifted to rocks, shells and sea glass.

The 2024 Hyundai Santa Cruz XRT has wide fender cladding, a dark chrome grille, and premium LED daytime running lights.
2024 Hyundai Santa Cruz is two vehicles in one

The half SUV, half pickup has a new XRT variant in place of the previous SEL Premium.

Planning for a loved one’s death can make losing them less difficult

Patients and family members deal with many unknowns, including not only the disease process but also the dying process.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.