AI in the Movies analyses film representations of artificial intelligence, from their first emergence in the 1950s up to 2020. These strong or general artificial intelligences take different forms: some are digital AIs, some robot AIs, some move between material and digital forms. Some are indistinguishable from humans, and some have no material existence at all. Analysis of these representations demonstrates filmmakers eroding the division between human and AI, by presenting character doubles, narrative parallels and eventually, identities in which the biological and artificial overlap and intersect in new hybrid forms.The book identifies the aspects of AI science that fascinate filmmakers and outlines the key themes and tropes in AI film, including parent-child relationships, the female robot, human-AI doubles, parallels and hybrids, and AI death and mortality.
Paula Murphy is Assistant Professor at the School of English in Dublin City University. Her research specialities include film and technology, short film, and contemporary Irish literature and film, and she has published widely in these areas.
List of FiguresIntroductionChapter One: AI in the Real World, AI in the Movies Chapter Two: The 1950s and 1960sChapter Three: The 1970sChapter Four: The 1980sChapter Five: The 1980sChapter Six: The 1990sChapter Seven: The 2000sChapter Eight: The 2010sChapter Nine: The 2010sConclusionNotesFilmographyBibliographyIndex
Through analysis of a wide range of movies, directors, performers and AI technologies, AI in the Movies will be of keen value to scholars of the moving image. A timely book helping readers of diverse AI interests understand how AI is imagined, hoped and feared.