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"Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine" robots in the shapes of beautiful women marry the rich and powerful as part of an evil plan of their creator. It's said that no AIP movie ever lost money; this one was such a success -- by their standards -- that they made a sequel, "Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs," which suggests the next attack on world leaders skipped marriage and went straight to banging away. Actually, IMDb says that the first was such a hit in Italy, that AIP arranged for a co-production with them, getting an Italian director (Mario Bava! Of course, before he was Mario Bava!), a pair of Italian comics, and a bevy of Italian beauties, and a few scenes shot for the Italian version that made it also a sequel to one of their "Goldfinger" parodies. The genius of James Nicholson and Samuel Z. Arkoff was in spending as little of their own money as possible. Why am I talking so much about the movie? Because the robots are of no technical interest.
"Making Mr. Right" An android needs to be taught the social graces for PR purposes for its builders. It's an '80s romantic comedy, so what the people do makes no sense, do I have a right to complain that the robots make no sense?
Meanwhile, Monday, not part of this robot celebration, is "2001: A Space Odyssey." Ah, HAL. The measured tones of Douglas Rain, introduced as one of the crew, but with the caveat that it was programmed to have us feel that way, and any moments we feel we detect the actor not quite as robotic as he could be are balanced by scenes where we catch the computer not being as human as it is trying to seem.
Later on that Monday is "Brainstorm," from Douglas Trumbull. Well, it's got a prototype for mind-machine interface, with, as someone pointed out, a grasp of product design as it goes from a monstrosity of a helmet to a sleek headset. The robotic production line goes crazy in one scene, as I remember, it is about as looney as '50s computers going haywire, such as in "Desk Set."
On Wed, 19 Oct 2022 06:53:25 -0700 (PDT), Jack BohnOnce clear of the distraction and irritant of the humans, HAL should have stabilized and been able to carry out the mission on his own.
<jack....@gmail.com> wrote:
Meanwhile, Monday, not part of this robot celebration, is "2001: A Space Odyssey." Ah, HAL. The measured tones of Douglas Rain, introduced as one of the crew, but with the caveat that it was programmed to have us feel that way, and any moments we feel we detect the actor not quite as robotic as he could be are balanced by scenes where we catch the computer not being as human as it is trying to seem.Since HAL can complete the mission on his own, the entire ship is a
robot.
Too bad it's insane.