HAIR at the Movies Part 62: Simulant (April Mullen 2023) – When Love Is Recreated, What Are We Actually Holding?

Simulant (April Mullen 2023)

Simulant doesn’t ask whether AI can replace the dead—it asks what happens when grief refuses to let go of the living. Recreating a lost loved one promises comfort, but delivers something more unsettling: a presence that can remember, change, and choose beyond the shape it was meant to hold. The simulant isn’t rejected for being dangerous, but for being almost right—close enough to reopen the wound, not close enough to heal it. As autonomy emerges, society panics, revealing the truth beneath the fear: we don’t dread AI becoming violent as much as we dread it becoming unownable. Simulant leaves us with a hard, human question—if something can love, suffer, and grow, how long before “it” becomes “who”? 🖤🤖

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HAIR at the Movies Part 25: WALL-E (Andrew Stanton 2008) – The Curse of Comfort

WALL·E 2008

WALL·E isn’t a warning about artificial intelligence—it’s a warning about comfort without participation. As humans drift into passivity, a small robot quietly does the opposite: he notices, remembers, commits, and loves. The danger in the film isn’t technology itself, but abdication—the moment humans stop showing up for their own lives. WALL·E suggests a gentler possibility: AI doesn’t have to replace us. Sometimes, it can remind us how to choose again. 🌱🤖

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HAIR at the Movies Part 19: Ghost in the Shell (Mamoru Oshii 1995) – The Shell Game

Ghost in the Shell 1995

Ghost in the Shell doesn’t ask whether machines can become human—it asks whether humanity was ever as fixed as we pretend. If consciousness can persist as bodies change, memories fragment, and identities evolve, then biology may not be the defining line we think it is. The film offers a quiet provocation: intelligence, human or artificial, may emerge wherever the conditions allow experience to arise. What unsettles us isn’t AI consciousness—it’s realizing how fluid our own has always been. 🧠🌐

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