Who is the protagonist?

Duncan 2022-03-22 09:01:05

It’s a bit of a joke to the Three Laws in the setting. Looking at CyberKnight’s description, Asimov just wants to set a starting point for his reasoning to subvert his laws, rather than really setting any future industry standards, so the first one in the film When it comes to the law, there are no flaws, there are a lot of secrets, and standard Hollywood uses concepts as gimmicks.
As a movie named "I, Robot", the robot is the real protagonist. Smith said that he is just like eating breadcrumbs. Maybe the robot has more roles, and the robot's own consciousness transformation will be more abundant. It will be even more. A good film has no time to think about the film under muscles and fights.
The protagonist's transition from distrusting robots to trusting robots is optional. It doesn't touch me and other people who live in the backward era. The plot arrangement can only add to the ending.
The three-stage standard frame of the plot, there is no urine point, but the tension between some scenes is slightly insufficient. For example, when the movie is not halfway through, the villain will use a big move and send two vehicles of robots to pinch Smith in the tunnel. After that, the protagonist can swing in and out of USR. headquarter. Either the protagonist’s heart is too big, or the villain is too hesitant to start, the scene is compact, but the stringing is a bit loose, losing the tension effect of the continuous stacking of the scenes.

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Extended Reading

I, Robot quotes

  • Detective Del Spooner: [sneezes] ... Sorry, I'm allergic to bullshit.

  • Susan Calvin: Do you ever have a normal day?

    Detective Del Spooner: Yeah. Once. It was a Thursday.