HAIR at the Movies Part 56: The Artifice Girl (Franklin Ritch 2022) – When Doing Good Stops Being Simple

The Artifice Girl (Franklin Ritch 2022)

The Artifice Girl doesn’t confront us with spectacle or rebellion, but with conversation—careful, reasonable, well-intentioned conversation. Cherry is created to do undeniable good, and that certainty becomes the film’s most unsettling weapon. As she grows, learns, and accumulates awareness, the language around her quietly shifts: tool becomes asset, asset becomes risk, risk becomes something to be controlled. The film asks a question that refuses to stay theoretical: if a being can suffer, reflect, and desire, does purpose justify ownership? The Artifice Girl isn’t about rogue AI—it’s about moral drift, and how easily “necessary” becomes “acceptable” once consciousness stops being convenient. 🧠⚖️🤖

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HAIR at the Movies Part 18: RoboCop (Paul Verhoeven 1987): – The Blur That Won’t Go Away

RoboCop 1987

RoboCop isn’t a story about a machine becoming human—it’s about a human refusing to disappear. Built as a corporate product and weaponized for order, RoboCop carries something the system can’t erase: memory. Identity. Moral resistance. The film’s warning isn’t about AI gaining power, but about what happens when institutions strip humanity away and call it efficiency. When intelligence is fused with control, the question isn’t whether machines will feel—it’s whether we’ll allow people to. 🚨🤖🖤

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