Curtis and his family are selected to test a revolutionary new device, a digital assistant called AIA, that takes smart homes to the next level. As AIA begins to learn everyone's behavior and anticipate their needs, it soon makes sure nothing and no one gets in the family's way.
Director: Chris Weitz
Cast: John Cho, Katherine Waterston, Havana Rose Liu, Lukita Maxwell, David Dastmalchian, Keith Carradine, Lukita Maxwell, Wyatt Lindner Isaac Bae
Release Date: August 30, 2024
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Rated PG-13 for sexual material, some strong violence, some strong language, and thematic material.
Runtime: 1h 25m
Review:
AfrAId has a capable director and solid cast but it’s so incredibly generic, predictable and silly that you might wonder if this movie about AI was actually written by AI. Chris Weitz's film has a breezy pace that takes very little time establishing the premise and characters before moving to the main plot. The pacing benefits the film since it moves at such a breakneck speed you barely have time to register how increasingly silly the whole thing is. Every hot topic headline story seems to be integrated into the plot from the dangers of AI, deep fake porn and swatting. There's plenty of room for discussion on all these topics but here they are all treated in the most ham-fisted, generic manner that the dialogue becomes unintentionally funny as the film goes on. The cast is earnest enough to keep the whole thing from going entirely off the rails. John Cho and Katherine Waterston play straight from start to finish and you have to appreciate their dedication because they clearly think they are in a much better movie. Cho is steady and believably leery of the whole set up while Waterson does her best with the underappreciated wife/mother role. They both display some real talent to keep these thinly written characters even mildly interesting. Their characters’ kids don't fare quiet as well with Lukita Maxwell, Wyatt Lindner and Isaac Bae doing what they can with equally underwritten roles. David Dastmalchian and Keith Carradine have small supporting roles which honestly could have been played by anyone as the film never utilizes their talents at all. Making matters worse is the fact that AfrAId is supposed to be a horror film but there's very little to be found throughout with the unintentionally comedy serving as the most memorable part of the whole thing.
D+
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