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Parallel:
Retrospective
The
Growing pains of artificial lifeforms are the subject of this
year's Retrospektive
Anybody
who has ever experienced the frustration of having a photocopy
machine try to automatically anticipate your needs, or whose
day cannot be complete without at least one big screaming
match with their computer, knows that the interaction between
man and his so-called 'intelligent' creations is not the
Utopian relationship we automatically assume it should be.
The
author Isaac Asimov actually created a set of 'Laws of Robotics'
to ensure a safe and productive relationship between robots
and their human masters. Although now an established concept
in science fiction, any realistic look at the genre reveals
an array of robots, androids and the genetically manipulated
who are constantly breaking down, flipping out and basically
having a miserable time finding a way to constructively
fit into the world of the very humans they're supposed to
be helping.
If
only machines would know their place! But, as dramatically
(and repeatedly) proved by this year's Retrospektive, entitled
Artificial Beings, the single most common factor involved
in the breakdown of such subtle and sophisticated mechanics
is, of course, the element of humanity.
The
most common (and commonly filmed) example of this is the archetypal
image of Boris Karloff in Frankenstein. The creation of an
obsessively ambitious scientist, blind to the built-in flaw
inherent in trying to make 'a new man' out of used parts,
this so-called 'creature' is more aptly a tragic figure whose
inability to reconcile his otherness with his desire for human
acceptance forces him into the role of the monster he is physically
perceived to be.
His
literary ancestor would be the Golem, whose clay-like figure,
most identified with Paul Wegener's silent classic Der Golem,
was created as a mystical protector, only to have his humane
power subverted by the worldly abuses of a human master.
The
desire to manufacture human perfection is a common conceit,
resulting in the race of homo superior in Gattaca, who turn
the 'normals' into menial slaves, or the creation of a synthetic
superman in Homunculus, whose bitterness at his one imperfection,
the lack of a soul, leads him into a rampage of vengeance
against a humanity who will never measure up to his manufactured
precision. Even the inhumanly beautiful man-made woman Alraune
in the film of the same name turns on her human creator
to avenge her inability to love.
So
ultimately 'they' really just want to be like 'us' and they
want the one thing we have that they don't love,
or at least sex. The monster returns in The Bride
Of Frankenstein to pester his recently married creator
for a bride of his own. Max the 'Android'
tries to get the girl in a stuttering imitation of Jimmy
Stewart programmed in from old videos, while the hulking
automaton Saturn 3, mimicking the personality
of creator Harvey Keitel, wants to rip his way into Farrah
Fawcett's pants.
Even
the genetically humanised dog in Sorbace Serdce (Dog Heart)
turns into a compulsive hound dog of a womaniser.
Naturally,
there are also humans who want to do it with robots, as
shown in Making Mr Right and Cherry
2000, and the Japanese have imagined some kinkily
interesting variations of cyberpunk sex among machine/metal
hybrids in both Tetsuo and Ghost In The Shell.
A
sort of idealised humanity does seem conceivable, though.
The killing machine of The Terminator rebels
against its evil robot masters and takes on a human family
in T2: Judgment Day, while the cyborg RoboCop
rebels against his evil human masters and actually gets the
girl. A sense of humanitarian socialism even wins out in Gibel
Sensacii, where the robots side with their brother workers
against the corporate bosses.
And,
in the end, boy Blade Runner gets girl replicant.
And for those who would prefer to share this more positive
outlook, check out the schedule of special events organised
by the Retrospektive to examine our past and future relations
with artificial beings, including readings, lectures, music
and even robot team soccer!
Andrew
Horn
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Berlin
1999 - Berlin 98
- Berlin 97 - Berlin
96
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