May 2, 2015
The summer movie season is officially upon us this weekend, with the release of the new “Avengers: Age of Ultron” leading the annual flood of superheroes, action movies and broad comedies into theatres. But while the new movie costs $250 million and features an array of star actors including Robert Downey, Jr., Scarlett Johannsen and Jeremy Renner in its cast, there is a more intriguing science fiction film that’s also in theatres now, called “Ex Machina.”
The two movies couldn’t be more different in terms of style, tone, scope and the audience they’re trying to reach, but both are dealing with the same moral and ethical question: can mankind create robots with artificial intelligence (AI), and if it can, will the robots prove to be a danger to our very existence? “Avengers” handles the topic as a backdrop to fast-flying wisecracks and high-flying action that’s fine for most kids (certainly over age 10) to handle, while “Ex Machina” is a thoughtful yet occasionally disturbing mind-bender for adults.
I’ll get my thoughts on “Avengers” out of the way first, because most of the planet is going to see this movie without giving a thought to how critics feel about it. Packed to the gills with about a dozen superheroes and their human allies like Nick Fury (played by the reliably cool Samuel L. Jackson) facing off against a giant force-field called Ultron that Tony Stark/Iron Man hoped would help save mankind from alien attack but which becomes evil itself, the movie is filled with frenzied action and a steady stream of hilarious one-liners that fans will appreciate in direct proportion to how much they’re obsessed with the characters and the Marvel universe they operate in.
There’s no sex or nudity, although an ongoing flirtation between Hulk’s human alter ego, David Banner, and Black Widow has a couple of mildly racy comments. The fact that Captain America is trying to navigate present-day society with a 1940s mindset provides comical reasons to remind other characters like Tony Stark not to swear, so foul language consists of a couple of s-words.