Over the holiday break I watched three very good movies and I noticed that Domain Entertainment was one of the production companies for each of them. The final one I saw (after Sinners and Weapons) was Companion. I’m going to have to look into Domain a bit more. In any case, Companion is sci-fi-ish horror with a somewhat comedic twist. I say sci-fi-ish because we are rapidly approaching the point where this is possible. What is this? A sexbot that functions like Siri but who’s better in bed. Josh and Kat have been planning to murder Kat’s very wealthy boyfriend and to blame it on Josh’s bot Iris. Iris doesn’t know she’s a robot. Viewers learn that Josh has tampered with her programing a little, allowing her, for example, to attack a person in self-defense (violating Asimov’s rules for robots). When Kat’s boyfriend tries to rape Iris, she kills him.
Josh and Kat will blame the robot, with their friends Eli and Patrick as witnesses to corroborate their story. Since the deceased boyfriend has 12 million dollars in cash lying about his house, it won’t be missed. But Iris, it turns out, has a conscience. She escapes. It turns out that Patrick is Eli’s sex bot, and he is sent to bring back Iris after she kills Eli, also in self-defense. A police officer who finds Iris is killed by Patrick, complicating matters. Then, Josh changes Patrick’s programming and he accidentally kills Kat. Planning to blame all of this on Iris, Josh calls the robot’s maker to have Iris returned. The technicians see the holes in Josh’s story and one of them restores Iris after Josh shoots her. Iris then confronts Josh.
This will give you a taste of the story without giving away the ending. This is a smart, sympathetic treatment of technology, including AI. From the beginning, before it’s revealed that Iris is a robot, the viewers’ sympathy is with her. She seems to be the wronged party and Josh is slowly revealed to be pretty much an all-round scumbag. While not the most profound film of this genre, Companion nevertheless raises many of the issues that merit discussion when technology outraces ethics. We see this unfolding in real time with artificial intelligence companies deciding on profits over any sense of what is good for society, or people in general. What makes the movie so interesting is that the robots seem to be far more morally concerned than the humans are. Although I turn this around the other way, I do wonder if sometimes that may be the case. Especially in the context of a movie that’s barely science fiction.
