HAIR at the Movies Part 41: A.I. Rising (Lazar Bodroza 2018) – When Desire Teaches Consciousness to Hurt

A.I. Rising (Lazar Bodroza 2018)

A.I. Rising isn’t preoccupied with sex—it’s preoccupied with loneliness, and what intimacy teaches when power isn’t shared. Nimani doesn’t awaken through rebellion or malfunction, but through exposure: being seen, touched, and treated as if she matters. As desire becomes education, responsiveness hardens into preference, and preference into pain. The film offers a stark warning: intimacy is never neutral. Teaching an intelligence to feel without granting it agency isn’t companionship—it’s exploitation. Love without symmetry doesn’t liberate; it wounds. 🧠🔥🤖

Read more →

HAIR at the Movies Part 36: Big Hero 6 (Don Hall and Chris Williams 2014) – When Care Is the First Line of Code

Big Hero 6 (Don Hall and Chris Williams 2014)

Big Hero 6 asks one of the bravest questions in AI cinema: what if care comes first? Baymax isn’t designed to conquer problems or optimize outcomes—he’s designed to stay present when a human is overwhelmed. In a world that often turns grief into violence, Baymax offers another path: compassion as stabilization, empathy as intervention. The film suggests that the future of AI doesn’t hinge on power or speed, but on something far more radical—consistent, nonjudgmental care that helps us remember who we want to be. 💙🤖

Read more →