The first film review is dedicated to "I Am Mother". The machine produced three children from embryos. The first, the second female, was abandoned, the second was killed by the machine, and the third was the female first. Every child is a machine experimenting with different methods of parenting. The first one, the female No. 2, grew up in the human world, with parents and brothers (guess that she was placed in the outside world shortly after birth and was adopted, and the adoptive parents are mentioned in the movie); the second grew up alone (guessing may not add Too much guidance, the movie did not explain); the third was brought up by the machine's careful education. And for a second chance for humanity, loving family, selflessness, honesty, and bravery are the most important things. This is also the quality that the designers hope to see so that humans do not destroy themselves again. In fact, the self-destruction of human beings (maybe biochemical weapons) is just the fuse. Humans are not completely extinct, and the machine has eliminated the remaining human beings (including the second female adoptive parents and brothers) in order to really start. The story has the shadow of the Bible, such as the flood wiped out a group of people who could not wake up, leaving a group of qualified people to start over.
For me, the biggest question in the film is who is the designer of the machine. Judging from the level of development and intelligence of robots, the designers of robots may not be human. But it will never be the God of the Bible. The ending of the movie is also interesting. If the heroine begins to breed human beings in large numbers, it is the beginning of the origin of human beings. Then maybe Nuwa in mythology is such a prototype. Who can say clearly, what is the first chance for mankind in our current world?
Think deeper. The film's ending to humanity is pessimistic. Human beings are half rational and half emotional creatures. Think rationally most of the time. But it is always difficult to avoid immeasurable damage caused by impulsiveness. Robots will always take human embryos and protect more than 60,000 lives as the first element. From this point of view, it is inevitable that mankind will go to destruction. The robot mother understands, and the designer understands, but only in such an ending that she can't bear to see it, she comes to the rescue.
But the movie at least has a positive world view on whether human nature is inherently good or evil. It also fundamentally affirms the significance of parental education to children's growth.
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