Saturday 22 February 2014

Free Download for Forex Robot

Movie review for I, Robot. Also included are links to watch and download I, Robot online for free.

Because what we have here is a summer blockbuster that's been hardwired with a little more intelligence than usual. It might not be a Solaris-level rumination on the nature of existence, but I, Robot's script subtly touches on slavery, fascism and man/ machine interaction, while still being peppered with recognisable, Smith-flavoured quips and kinetic action set-pieces. The expected money shots don't fail to impress either, with a mid-movie car-tunnel crunch proving particularly pulse-pumping.
To his credit, Smith is trying a new style here. This is not the one-dimensional Slick Willie of Independence Day. His 'tec is a bitter throwback, a man uncomfortable in a droid-filled America and sceptical of any technology that can think for itself. He doesn't get up to the usual no-scratch heroics either, one particular robo-scrap ending with a bedraggled and bloodied Spooner cursing his luck.
On the downside, Alex Proyas, the man who brought a unique vision to life in cult fave Dark City, is somewhat hamstrung by the conventions of what, in essence, is a basic detective story: clue A leads to clue B while Smith's loner cop faces a wall of scepticism along the way. But he and production designer Patrick Tatopoulos have at least created a dazzling future-world, the effects seamlessly integrated with the actors. Best of all is Alan Tudyk, who invests metal-man Sonny with more emotion than the entire human cast put together.

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