The basic set-up isn't entirely original. We're watching a markedly less horny Weird Science, or a subtitled redo of 1987's Making Mr. Right, the gender-swapped Weird Science that featured John Malkovich in the Stevens role. It's also slightly hampered by the fact that, for much of the duration, Eggert and Stevens have to display a reluctant, baffled chemistry: that of someone who doesn't cook and a top-of-the-range eggwhisk. (I think Schrader has to pair them up as quickly as she does to stop us asking how everybody got here.) If Stevens, speaking aptly flawless German, is here to get bums on seats, the downcast Eggert, who never seems too far away from tears, proves more emblematic of the overall picture. This is a curious film, in both senses of the word. Schrader sets out to interrogate her central relationship - where the robot works for her heroine, and where he/it doesn't - but she strikes an oddly muted tone in so doing: my fear is that people are going to show up for a laugh-a-minute robo romcom, and find themselves confronted by something in a far lower key, melancholy when it's not being outright philosophical. Granted, some comic elements are visible: a raucous homecoming, an impish Sandra Hüller as a CEO spouting couples-therapy truisms like code. Yet Schrader keeps backing away from these, and her interest drifts away into strange little sidebars and tangents: Stevens communing with nature and touring abandoned churches at twilight, a late-breaking crisis involving Alma's infirm father (surely a ragged remnant of the source material), which comes out of nowhere and disappears just as quickly. If this is meant as romantic fantasy - and the ending suggests it finally might be - then it's the fantasy of a particularly morose kind of soul, exactly the type who might turn her nose up at the very idea of the Stevens Perfecticon 3000. "What does it feel like to have an orgasm?," our dashing android asks late on. Alma's response seems gloomily telling: "It feels like dissolving." Schrader's film remains striking and atmospheric, but it's held back by a refusal to have all that much fun with the opportunities put in front of it, and a marked tendency to overanalyse everything. Are there more women like this out there than we/I think?
I'm Your Man is now playing in selected cinemas, and available to rent via the Curzon Home Cinema.
I think the crucial thing here is that the lead character is a scientist, and quickly realises the Danbot is working to set off triggers in her brain because she is as much a pre-programmed robot as he is, only she's flesh and blood and operating through nature's construction.
ReplyDeleteThere's a scene late on where one of her fellow scientists who has also taken part in the trial tells her this is the best thing that's ever happened to him, as at last he has a partner, and you don't know whether to be happy for him or disturbed he was so easily exploited. It's a fascinating film.
This is a far smarter reading of it than I arrived at (and yes, that scene with the colleague late on is interesting, as it's one of the few times the film acknowledges there might be *other* experiments going on, featuring other subjects). I thank you for addending it here!
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