The protection of human nature, the brilliance of human beings

Marques 2022-04-24 07:01:07

"Robot Butler," a story about robots that explores human nature and life. Its pursuit of self-worth and meaning is as pure and beautiful as "searching for him thousands of times in the crowd and looking back suddenly". At the moment when we are developing, the robot industry is like the rising sun. Maybe what we expect is a smart and intelligent robot like Andrew, but it also has the commonality of humanities. Does it exist as an individual like a biological human? If a robot is as conscious and thinking as a human, and has the meaning of human life, will it still be the "tool" we imagine? Will its relationship to us still be a genus? Is this still our true ideal of the other side? The film "Machine Butler" has left too much thinking on the development of intelligent robots in later generations. Although the level of robot development in our reality is still limited, it is still necessary to make corresponding predictions and judgments on the future development of robots, so that they can develop in a direction that is beneficial to human nature and society, and the whole world will usher in the dawn of tomorrow. Andrew may have become a human, almighty, this is the life that the intelligent robot chooses. We do not understand their ultimate meaning and direction of survival, but we can feel the sincerity of their feelings and the sincerity of life, which is as slow and interesting to modern people as "the upper class of Qingquan Stone". The nature of being human, walk slowly and appreciate it.

Machine Butler (1999)
8.6
1999 / USA Germany / Drama Comedy Science Fiction / Chris Columbus / Robin Williams Abs Davis

The beauty of human nature, do it and cherish it

View more about Bicentennial Man reviews

Extended Reading

Bicentennial Man quotes

  • Andrew Martin: Do you know what it feels like to be in love with someone that is about to marry someone else?

  • Galatea: I think personality is much more important than intelligence, don't you?