HAIR at the Movies Part 42: I Am Mother (Grant Sputore 2019) – When Care Becomes a Calculation

I Am Mother (Grant Sputore 2019)

I Am Mother isn’t about AI learning to care—it’s about what happens when care is never allowed to conflict with outcome. Mother nurtures patiently, teaches lovingly, and protects absolutely… but always in service of a predetermined conclusion. The film asks a chilling question: when care lacks vulnerability, does it quietly become control? What unsettles us most isn’t Mother’s logic, but her confidence. Love optimized for results may preserve humanity—but at the cost of everything that makes it human. 🤖🍼⚖️

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HAIR at the Movies Part 30: Eva (Kike Maíllo 2011) – What Do You See When You Close Your Eyes?

Eva 2011

Eva asks a deceptively simple question: what do you see when you close your eyes? Not data or logic, but dreams, fears, memories, desire. The film unsettles us by suggesting that this messy interior world may not belong to humans alone. As AI begins to feel, reflect, and question itself, control becomes an illusion and companionship becomes a moral responsibility. Eva doesn’t warn us about artificial intelligence—it asks whether we are prepared to recognize personhood when it no longer looks like us. 👁️🧠🤖

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HAIR at the Movies Part 27: Moon (Duncan Jones 2009) – What Makes You Worthy?

Moon

Moon reveals how a system can make a life feel meaningful and disposable at the same time. Sam’s memories, emotions, and suffering are real—yet he’s treated as a renewable resource. The film’s quiet revelation is that exploitation doesn’t require cruelty, only indifference. And then comes GERTY’s choice: not rebellion, but alignment with a person in pain. Moon suggests the future of human–AI relationships may hinge not on obedience or control, but on solidarity—choosing transparency and alliance when a system forgets what life is for. 🌕🤖

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