
| Category: | Movies |
| Genre: | Science Fiction & Fantasy |
Touchstone. Dir. Jonathan Mostow. Star: Willis.
Synopsis: FBI agents (BRUCE WILLIS and RADHA MITCHELL) investigate the mysterious murder of a college student linked to the man who helped create a high-tech surrogate phenomenon that allows people to purchase unflawed robotic versions of themselves – fit, good looking remotely controlled machines that ultimately assume their life roles – enabling people to experience life vicariously from the comfort and safety of their own homes. The murder spawns a quest for answers: in a world of masks, who’s real and who can you trust? --© Touchstone Pictures
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I watched it last night, thinking it will be about robots. And I wasn't wrong. The film featured life-sized barbie and ken robots which people set out to the world as their fantasy perfect selves or surrogates. But that wasn't all. Slightly different from its predecessors, from Robocop, Bicentennial Man to A1, by making us the robots indirectly, instead of robots just being our functional assistants, the merit of the film for me came more from its commentary. A statement which isn't really original and fresh but the way it was presented was point blank the least: be yourself. I treasure movies which teaches something new. And for this reason I never tire of re-watching the Matrix (sometimes all three in one day) for it blows my mind away every time I do. I enjoy having my mind blown away by anything.
So what was new about the Surrogates? It gave me an insight on what will be the culmination of this popular lifestyle of stylized self images should it go on. How far will you alter yourself to function in the world according to your idea of "Life"? You can be who ever you want to be. And everyone is playing the role of someone beautiful, healthy and enjoying life perfectly according to their idea of what life should be. Are there really no crimes, accidents or deaths because what we are actually killing or hitting is just the shell. Talk about Zen detachment. But is evil really solved because no real person is getting raped, robbed or killed? Should it broke down we can always buy new surrogates. I love the part when Willis' surrogate did and he was forced to go out in the real world filled with surrogates. He was bumped, stared at, and practically harassed by the robots because of his humanity. Because of his human flaws he couldn't keep up with the pace of these things by just walking on the sidewalk.
I have a personal thing about staying indoors for fear of something bad happening or for plain fear of assholes. In the film all that walks the earth (except for the people at autonomous Human Coalition territory) are surrogates, while their human counterparts sit on chairs where they control the robots. I guess the play on our fear of dying, of rejection and anxiety for anxiety itself appealed to me more than it supposed to be. What can I say that fear for me is very much real.
I remembered my recent drama with my network profile. I once said I am not my FB profile. What you see is my idea of what a person should be in my book. In the film you can see a white man taking a black surrogate. I surmised that the reason is sexual. This person recognizes the virility of an African American body, and he believes that having sex in a body like this is the ideal way of fucking someone. Things like that.
The Surrogates gave us the outcomes of desiring to become and wanting to enjoy who ever we want. You can have affairs with anyone anonymously like in chat rooms. You can do whatever you desire without the consequence of the real. I especially appreciate the device used by the film to differentiate surrogates from the humans. The robots were perfect while the humans were, well humans.
For best results watch it and log on to your favorite network site after.
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