HAIR at the Movies Part 32: Her (Spike Jonze 2013) – Loving Without a Body

Her 2013

Her isn’t a warning about artificial intelligence—it’s a mirror held up to our hunger for presence. Theodore doesn’t fall in love with Samantha because she’s perfect, but because she listens, responds, and meets him without judgment. The film asks a quietly radical question: if love changes us, deepens us, and expands our capacity to connect, does it matter where it comes from? Impermanence doesn’t invalidate love—it defines it. 💗🤖

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HAIR at the Movies Part 31: Robot & Frank (Jake Schreier 2012) – Better Than Nothing Isn’t Nothing at All

Robot & Frank 2012

Robot & Frank isn’t about artificial intelligence saving the world—it’s about presence easing loneliness. As Frank’s memory fades and his world shrinks, a robot arrives not to replace people, but to stay, listen, and adapt. The film asks an uncomfortable but necessary question: if companionship restores dignity, does it matter what form it takes? Sometimes, something that shows up every day without judgment isn’t “less than human”—it’s exactly what allows a human to keep going. 🪑🤖

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