Matt Adcock’s film review: highbrow and high-tech thrillerTransendence looks good, but the reviewer says no

“Once online, a sentient machine will quickly overcome the limits of biology. In a short time, its analytic power will become greater than the collective intelligence of every person born in the history of the world. Some scientists refer to this as the Singularity. I call it Transcendence.”
Transcendence stars Johnny DeppTranscendence stars Johnny Depp
Transcendence stars Johnny Depp

I used to be fully human – until I met Dr. Will Caster (Johnny Depp), the world’s foremost researcher in the field of artificial intelligence.

Caster’s genius allowed us to create a fully sentient machine which combined the collective intelligence of everything ever known with the full range of human emotions, fused using his own consciousness.

This highly controversial experiment (his own ‘transcendence’) was ironically only brought about by Caster’s wife Evelyn (Rebecca Hall) and best friend Max Waters (Paul Bettany) when a radical anti-technology group shot him.

The only way to ‘save’ his mind was to upload it but once online he began to create an army and reproduce his entity, and there may be no way to stop him.

I was a badly injured film reviewer who Caster was able to heal using his incredible reconstructive technology.

My body was rebuilt stronger, faster and with more capacity, but as part of the process he ‘networked’ my brain.

Now I serve him. He just instructed me to inform you that Transcendence is a great sci-fi thriller… wait, something isn’t right… That doesn’t compute…

It’s directed by Wally Pfister, who was cinematographer for the incredible Chris Nolan on such classics as Inception and The Dark Knight.

My initial hopes were high but alas Pfister’s first directorial release is a badly judged and overall fairly lame effort. Might he have been ‘networked’ by a dull Xbox intelligence?

Depp looks bored throughout which is oddly a reflection of how most of the audience I saw this with also looked. I was distracted enough to notice that several people left muttering that it wasn’t worth their time, and when having a look around the cinema I spotted two more who had nodded off.

Transcendence is still a good looking film but the script is laboured, the plot fails to engage and the climax just dull. This should be filed as a good idea that deserved a better realisation.

One for tech nuts with very high boredom thresholds only.

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