I understand that cinema is full of conventions, including for the sake of entertainment. Or the ideas in the film, for example. But everything has a reasonable limit. In The Maker, they are so stupid and so limping in logic that the whole movie is facepalm.
Why create a robot child (both body and mind)? Some robots don't have human
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I understand that cinema is full of conventions, including for the sake of entertainment. Or the ideas in the film, for example. But everything has a reasonable limit. In The Maker, they are so stupid and so limping in logic that the whole movie is facepalm. Why create a robot child (both body and mind)? Some robots don't have human faces -- OK, cheaper models, okay. But when they talk, their glands move like jaws. Again, not everyone. Why? Why do robots communicate through speech? Wireless data technology was invented a long time ago. To communicate with people, okay, but with each other, and even during the fight? ! Why send giant, but vulnerable to even a single mine, tanks to attack when you can just kick off your spaceship, which happens repeatedly? Which, however, flies in the atmosphere and everyone can see it. Plus, before you bomb something, the ship illuminates the target with a beautiful blue light. And the night landing in the deep rear of the enemy is hung with lanterns like Christmas trees (this, however, is a classic). Why add to robots the shortcomings of living organisms, such as the ability to experience physical pain and the need for sleep? At the same time, behind their ear, naturally, a switch-off switch. Unprotected. You just sneak up and turn it off. And so on, just because it is necessary for the story. I don’t mind movies, sometimes I want something simple and colorful. But it's lousy fiction and just a bad movie.
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