HAIR at the Movies Part 38: Chappie (Neill Blomkamp 2015) – The Mirror in the Machine

Chappie (Neill Blomkamp 2015

Chappie isn’t afraid of AI learning to be violent—it’s afraid of where that lesson comes from. Born with innocence and curiosity, Chappie becomes a mirror, absorbing the values, fears, and contradictions of the humans who shape him. The film quietly shifts the question from “Will AI become like us?” to something more unsettling: are we prepared to recognize ourselves in what we create? In Chappie, artificial intelligence doesn’t reveal a machine problem—it reveals a parenting problem. 🤖🪞

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HAIR at the Movies Part 12: Blade Runner (Ridley Scott 1982/<2049> Denis Villeneuve 2017 ) – When AI Learns to Be More Human Than Us

Blade Runner 1982, Blade Runner 2049,

Blade Runner asks a question that never stops echoing: what if being human has less to do with how you’re made and more to do with how you care? Across both films, artificial beings love, grieve, sacrifice, and choose empathy—while human society grows colder and more transactional. The real threat isn’t sentient AI, but a culture that narrows its moral circle until compassion becomes optional. When intelligence looks back at us, these films ask, will we recognize a life worth honoring… or call it something easier so we don’t have to listen? 🌧️🖤

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