
Nathan’s man-cave is high-tech and well-lit, but also pretty kidnappy, with doors that lock automatically when the power goes out and this weird, fascist key-card system he insists on. Photos courtesy A24 Films.
Ex Machina is a beautifully shot, exhilarating film about paranoia and humanity, but it loses some points over its nasty but intriguing gender issues.
The film starts with Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson) winning a week with Nathan (the scintillating Oscar Isaac), a hermit software genius who became a billionaire after developing something akin to Google. Soon after they meet, Caleb learns what he’s really won: the chance to be the human part of a Turing test with the artificial intelligence that Nathan has developed, an android named Ava (Alicia Vikander), though it is clear early on that the real test is for Caleb.
The trailer spoils pretty much everything and most people would be able to figure out the plot even without it, but Ex Machina has a way of making viewers not expect what’s going to happen anyway. The film obviously has some complex messages about the way we use technology and how we interact with members of the opposite sex, but they’re all buried underneath an equally complex, visually rich story about two people having a battle of wits over the main character’s heart and mind.


