Singularity (2017 film)

Singularity is a Swiss/American science fiction film. It was written and directed by Robert Kouba, and its first shoot, in 2013, starred Julian Schaffner, Jeannine Wacker and Carmen Argenziano. The film was first released in 2017, after further scenes with John Cusack were added.[4][5]

Singularity
Directed byRobert Kouba
Produced by
  • Robert Kouba
  • Sebastian Cepeda
Written by
  • Robert Kouba
  • Sebastian Cepeda
Starring
Music by
Cinematography
  • Sebastian Cepeda
  • Jesse Brunt
Edited by
  • Robert Kouba
  • Kyle Tekiela
Production
company
Distributed byVertical Entertainment
Release date
  • November 3, 2017 (2017-11-03)
Running time
92 minutes
CountrySwitzerland / United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100,000[1]
Box office$73,264[2][3]

Plot

In 2020, robotics company C.E.O. Elias VanDorne reveals Kronos, the supercomputer he has invented to end all war. Kronos decides that mankind is responsible for all war, and it tries to use robots to kill all humans. VanDorne and Damien Walsh, a colleague, upload themselves into Kronos and watch the destruction. Ninety-seven years later, Andrew, a kind-hearted young man, wakes up in a ruined world. VanDorne and Walsh, still in Kronos, watch Andrew meet Calia, a teenage girl who seeks the last human settlement, the Aurora. Though Calia is first reluctant to let Andrew accompany her, the two later fall in love.

Andrew shows superhuman strength and resilience when marauders attack the party, and the morning after the ambush, Calia finds machinery in one of Andrew's wounds. Calia abandons Andrew. The two are then captured and brought to Walsh, who tells them that Andrew, the first in a new generation of machines, was designed to kill any remaining humans. Andrew the machine has his long-dead eponym's memories, which Walsh makes Andrew search for clues about Aurora’s location. Andrew instead envisions his mother, Veronica, who reminds him that he's still her loving son. This helps Andrew the machine identify with his eponymous self. Andrew overrides Walsh's program and escapes with Calia.

Andrew and Calia spot the lights of what they believe to be Aurora, but only find a robot city. Damien concludes that Aurora was a myth after all, ordering his robot drones to kill them and all remaining humans, having kept the few scavengers and marauders alive only to follow them to Aurora. As the robots start carpet bombing the few remaining humans, Andrew and Calia flee underground, finding a high-tech room. Reacting to the presence of a human, the room reveals itself to be the control room of a space ship which sets course for Aurora - a distant planet rather than an Earth-based settlement. With Kronos' bombs approaching, Andrew and Calia activate the ship's hyperdrive to escape despite the threat that when they reach Aurora, the humans there will destroy Andrew due to his robotic nature.

Now possessing the location of Aurora, Elias betrays and kills Damien. Andrew and Calia arrive at Aurora which proves to be a lush planet with futuristic cities. In a voiceover, Calia proclaims that Kronos will come after Aurora, but that with Andrew, a machine that may be more human than anyone else, they stand a chance. Watching a massive fleet launching towards Aurora, Elias proclaims that the last of humanity will face their fate once he reaches Aurora.

Cast

  • Julian Schaffner as Andrew Davis
  • John Cusack as Elias VanDorne[6]
  • Jeannine Wacker as Calia
  • Carmen Argenziano as Damien Walsh
  • Eileen Grubba as Veronica Davis, Andrew's mother.

Production

Singularity began as a low-budget sci-fi film called Aurora, which was shot in 2013 in the Czech Republic and Switzerland. John Cusack was not involved in the original shoot. Years later, scenes with Cusack interacting only with Argenziano were shot and inserted into the new production, and extensive CGI effects were used to tie the new material to the original film.[4]

Reception

Jason Pirodsky from The Prague Reporter gave a negative review, criticizing production values, continuity errors, and the film's "thoroughly unconvincing narrative", adding that 80% of it consisted of "Wacker and Schaffner aimlessly walking around Czech forests in search for Aurora, the fabled last outpost of humanity that they don’t really know anything about". Pirodsky also criticized the addition of Cusack, noting that he only interacts with one other character as his performance was shot years after the majority of scenes were filmed.[4]

gollark: No.
gollark: And speaking of the main characters, again they are badly written and flawed. Right from the start they are portrayed as a group of bumbling fools that mess up at every turn. It is really hard to believe that these clowns had the brains to build a time machine.
gollark: I know, I was just saying how nonspurious it was.
gollark: People mow lawns when they are too long. Grass grows when sunny. QED.
gollark: That's not spurious, that seems totally related.

References

  1. "Aurora". Kickstarter. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  2. "Singularity (2017) Domestic gross". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  3. "Singularity (2017) Foreign Gross". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  4. Pirodsky, Jason (2017-11-05). "Movie Review: Low-Budget 'Singularity' Drowns in Lofty Ambition". The Prague Reporter. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  5. Pinchefsky, Carol. "Humans are being hunted in trailer for John Cusack film Singularity". Syfy Wire. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  6. "Technology goes wrong for John Cusack in 'Singularity'". Malay Mail. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
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