After Dr. Will Caster (Johnny Depp, “Pirates of the Caribbean”), a renowned researcher in AI (artificial intelligence), is shot by a tech-terrorist (Kate Mara, "Iron Man 2") group and dying from a radioactive poisoning, his loving wife and fellow researcher, Evelyn (Rebecca Hall, “Iron Man 3”) desperately tries to keep him alive, in cyberspace. Technology advances rapidly and Will/AI perform feats beyond human limitations, alarming their colleagues (Paul Bettany, “The Tourist” and Morgan Freeman, “Red") and FBI (Cillian Murphy, “In Time”).
Hall grounds the movie. With palpable emotions, she makes you believe Will is really alive and their relationship is far beyond virtual. The moment she first notices Will is more than digits and speaks to her or when she realizes what Will/AI could break down her body chemistry and exactly read her feelings. Bettany, whose character is a third wheel in Will and Evelyn's relationship adds complexity with being torn between what he believes needs to be done and remains loyal to his good friends, but both Freeman and Murphy are wasted in their minor roles.
More than man versus machine, the premise explores what it means to be human, questions the existence of soul, humanity and ethical issues. A directorial debut by Wally Pfister, director Christopher Nolan's ("Batman" trilogy) long-time and Oscar-winning cinematographer, the film is exquisitely photographed, and if executed right, has the potential to rival the critically lauded “Inception.”
But the biggest flaw is the massive leap of logic that transcends suspension of disbelief. After a compelling beginning, it jumps off the cliff quickly. The thought-provoking nature remains through the end, but with the script that lets events unravel illogically, the film fails to live up to its transcendent potentials.
http://www.sdentertainer.com/arts/movie-review-transcendence/
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