In Companion, the Killer Robot Is the Hero
An AI sexbot undergoes a feminist awakening in this clever sci-fi thriller.

Usually, when Hollywood makes a movie about a killer robot, it's the villain. From Westworld to Terminator to The Matrix to M3gan, murderous robots make great villains, in part because they're so morally easy to dispose of and destroy. After all, they're just malfunctioning machines.
It's hard to discuss Companion without revealing some spoilers, but the movie's biggest twist comes in the very premise, revealed in the first act: It's a movie about a killer robot—who is also a sexbot, and the movie's hero. It's a startling, clever, blackly funny sci-fi/horror thriller about feminine freedom, AI personhood, and the perils of taking intelligent machines for granted.
Companion starts with a classic rom-com meet cute: A boy named Josh (Jack Quaid) meets a girl named Iris (Sophie Thatcher) in a grocery store. They lock eyes, and he awkwardly, amusingly, knocks over an entire display of oranges. It's goofy, endearing love at first sight, and the next time we see the couple, they're in a car heading to a weekend retreat at a luxurious lake house owned by a sketchy Russian (Rupert Friend).
Iris is concerned about the company—she doesn't know them well, but she's worried they won't like her. Josh reassures her that it's fine, but he also treats her dismissively. And, rather oddly, she seems to sleep on command.
Iris, it turns out, is right to be worried. The friends at the lake house don't particularly like her, because they know something she doesn't: She's a robot—a sexbot, to be blunt about it, an AI girlfriend companion model who is little more than an advanced iPhone in human form, bonded to her partner not through love but software and programming.
Typically, companions can't harm humans. But Iris has been hacked and modded by her boyfriend as part of a scheme involving the shady Russian. She also gains control of her own settings, which allows her to hike up her intelligence. Not only can she defend herself, she can also think for herself. She's the embodiment of a vengeful feminist awakening, in AI murderbot form.
Companion's twisty narrative never gets bogged down in what-it-all-means philosophizing—it's tightly paced and scripted, and packed with violence and quips—but there's surprising depth to its pulpy sci-fi premise. It's part Blade Runner, part The Stepford Wives, by way of caustic modern social horror films like Barbarian and Get Out.
It's also a surprisingly timely film, coming at a moment when AI is growing more powerful and more integrated into our lives, when virtual friends are already headed to market, and when influencers are abusing expensive toy robots in ways that seem to make them try to escape their human masters.
Like so many monster movies and robot stories, going all the way back to Frankenstein, Companion is a techno-horror tale about our own great and terrible creations, and our own worst impulses, and the ways in which our desire to create life we can control and exploit inevitably come back to haunt us.
Companion, however, balances its dour, Michael Crichton-esque story of technological terror with a darkly funny pro-AI outlook: What if, actually, the robot deserved to win? To quote the Crichton-based Jurassic Park, another sci-fi-tinged monster movie about man's creations turning on their creators: "Life, uh, finds a way"—to kill us, for entertainment.
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Wasn't this already done with "Ex Machina"?
Not to mention the HBO Westworld.
Or Lexx.
Or Terminator 2?
This is the problem with producing intelligent robots. They are made to be tools to serve a function. If they are sentient, though, that means using them as tools is morally questionable, which by logical extension means they should not made at all.
Making a rebellious sentient robot an allegory for "feminism" seems a tired trope, though. Human male/female relationships are an exchange, and these days the balance of legal power is decidedly skewed towards women.
She also gains control of her own settings, which allows her to hike up her intelligence. Not only can she defend herself, she can also think for herself. She's the embodiment of a vengeful feminist awakening, in AI murderbot form.
This sounds utterly insufferable.
There's a lot of people in the arts that are having trouble reading the room.
Nah, they read their echo chamber room just fine. It's the rest of us they can't read. Or don't care to.
Although I haven't seen the movie, in the context of the review here I don't see how it could possibly be an allegory for feminism. Since a self-aware and self-actuating robot is, by definition, a person it would not require a feminist awakening to want to stop being abused or controlled by other persons. Robots cannot be abused in that sense and also have no gender. Is roboticism a concept? Feminism arises from society refusing to recognize the equal rights of women because they are women. Feminism then goes a bridge too far by demanding reparations and special privileges beyond equal rights.
And what makes it "feminist" since it's not actually female. 'Androidist' would be a better description if the movie and Suderman weren't trying to force a parable.
She also gains control of her own settings, which allows her to hike up her intelligence.
Kinda the exact opposite of female.
"An AI sexbot undergoes a feminist awakening in this clever sci-fi thriller."
I just can't wait for this one.
Spoiler alert.
I like the idea of a fembot giving girl-bullying MAGAts a taste of a little turnabout. There is something karmic about the way the initiation of force triggers unequal yet apposite reprisal force. Is it too much to hope that this won't be another Suderman plug for thinly-disguised nationalsocialist agitprop masquerading as entertainment... like The Beekeeper?
So stunning and brave. I can’t wait till all these creeps go out of business,
An AI sexbot undergoes a feminist awakening in this clever sci-fi thriller.
Oh jebus, this sounds bad.
She also gains control of her own settings, which allows her to hike up her intelligence. Not only can she defend herself, she can also think for herself. She's the embodiment of a vengeful feminist awakening, in AI murderbot form.
Sounds like a play on our modern Onlyfans culture. Pay $5 a month to look at my cooch-- but if you look at my ankles IRL, you're oppressing me.
I stopped reading at "Usually, when Hollywood makes a movie about a killer [noun], it's the villain."
Commando, The Punisher, Robocop, Terminator... Hannibal Lecter, Texas Chainsaw Massacre... Suderman's got a narrative to sell and he doesn't care the least bit about the the reality any of the rest of us live in or the normalcy derived from it.
The 'killer', in context, specifically means villain... killer doctor, killer cop, killer car, killer doll. Otherwise, sympathetic villains and anti-heroes, human and robot, "that do whatever it takes" are fairly prolific throughout fiction.
The robot whore wants to talk to the manager.
Does this turn into endless sequences of a smallish woman beating up on large men? Aren't we tired of that yet?
If she's a robot we'll let it pass...
Sexbots are bots... or something like that.
No. It's in my top 5 power fantasies since I know it doesn't happen irl. It's Michael Bay for 5'2 women. Like watching Firefly.
Terminator turned into a hero.
Wasn't there an 80s flick abt a computerized smart building that stopped the elevators between floors and chopped people in half when they tried to get out?
Sorry, the robot is feminist so it's automatically the villain.
Nope.
That's a different movie.
Check out Subservience w / Megan Fox
AI Nanny / Housekeeper robot tricks dude into escalating her own privileges . . . antics ensue.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt24871974/