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A.I.: Künstliche Intelligenz

Originaltitel: A.I. Artificial Intelligence
  • 2001
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 26 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
332.811
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
1.279
477
A.I.: Künstliche Intelligenz (2001)
Theatrical Trailer from Warner Bros. Pictures
trailer wiedergeben2:13
3 Videos
99+ Fotos
Künstliche IntelligenzScience-Fiction-EposAbenteuerDramaScience-Fiction

"Ein hochentwickelter Roboterjunge sehnt sich danach, ""real"" zu werden, um die Liebe seiner menschlichen Mutter wiederzuerlangen.""Ein hochentwickelter Roboterjunge sehnt sich danach, ""real"" zu werden, um die Liebe seiner menschlichen Mutter wiederzuerlangen.""Ein hochentwickelter Roboterjunge sehnt sich danach, ""real"" zu werden, um die Liebe seiner menschlichen Mutter wiederzuerlangen."

  • Regie
    • Steven Spielberg
  • Drehbuch
    • Brian Aldiss
    • Ian Watson
    • Steven Spielberg
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Haley Joel Osment
    • Jude Law
    • Frances O'Connor
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    332.811
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    1.279
    477
    • Regie
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Drehbuch
      • Brian Aldiss
      • Ian Watson
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Haley Joel Osment
      • Jude Law
      • Frances O'Connor
    • 2.1KBenutzerrezensionen
    • 117Kritische Rezensionen
    • 65Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 18 Gewinne & 71 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos3

    AI: THE SOMNIUM FILES - nirvanA Initiative
    Trailer 1:39
    AI: THE SOMNIUM FILES - nirvanA Initiative
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence
    Trailer 2:13
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence
    Trailer 2:13
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence
    A Guide to the Films of Steven Spielberg
    Clip 2:31
    A Guide to the Films of Steven Spielberg

    Fotos169

    Poster ansehen
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    + 162
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Haley Joel Osment
    Haley Joel Osment
    • David
    Jude Law
    Jude Law
    • Gigolo Joe
    Frances O'Connor
    Frances O'Connor
    • Monica Swinton
    Sam Robards
    Sam Robards
    • Henry Swinton
    Jake Thomas
    Jake Thomas
    • Martin Swinton
    William Hurt
    William Hurt
    • Prof. Hobby
    Ken Leung
    Ken Leung
    • Syatyoo-Sama
    Clark Gregg
    Clark Gregg
    • Supernerd
    Kevin Sussman
    Kevin Sussman
    • Supernerd
    Tom Gallop
    Tom Gallop
    • Supernerd
    Eugene Osment
    Eugene Osment
    • Supernerd
    April Grace
    April Grace
    • Female Colleague
    Matt Winston
    Matt Winston
    • Executive
    Sabrina Grdevich
    Sabrina Grdevich
    • Sheila
    Theo Greenly
    Theo Greenly
    • Todd
    Jeremy James Kissner
    Jeremy James Kissner
    • Kid
    Dillon McEwin
    • Kid
    Andy Morrow
    • Kid
    • Regie
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Drehbuch
      • Brian Aldiss
      • Ian Watson
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen2.1K

    7,2332.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10rotaruhajime

    Can't re-watch it again

    I was 13-14 when I watched this movie. It's a long movie if I recall it correctly. I was so moved by it's theme, so I watched it all. I had strong feelings of sadness and sympathy towards little robot David that wanted to be a real child and to have a mom to love him. And that little bear ... I cried during some scenes. I don't think I cried that much at any movie like at this one. Even though it's a Sci-Fi movie it has a lot of emotions. I have never watched it again since then. It'll be too hard for me P.S I don't get how some people can rate this incredible movie with an 1 ? like why ? Of course it's not a perfect movie, but sometimes it doesn't have to be. It matters your feelings about it, because this movie is that deep. 10/10
    jessfink

    God, what a mess

    This was a horrible, horrible movie. A big, incoherent, pointless exercise in the typical Spielbergian club-you-over-the-head-until-you-get-it style that has absolutely no redeeming value whatsoever. Even the special effects are a waste, adding nothing to the plot and serving only as a place to dump millions of dollars where a few would have done just fine. Does it have a point of view? Who knows? The story is as disjointed as a road map of Afghanistan. Does it have humor, charm, pathos, insight--the few things, at least, you think you can count on from Steven Spielberg? No, no, no, no. Does it have a keen insight, a cold, dispassionate worldview, straightforward emotions, economy of action, like most of Kubrick's films? Uh, no, again.

    This film is simply miserable. A hateful, ill-conceived, pointless, overblown, fragmented, shrill, poorly-executed disaster of a film that should serve as a cautionary tale to thousands of wanna-be filmmakers when they wonder if success is something that can be maintained after thirty years in the business. A disaster and a colossal disappointment, from beginning to end.
    rooprect

    When Steven met Stanley (or E.T. meets HAL9000?!)

    The short review: if you're in the mood for E. T. then you will LOVE this flick. If you're in the mood for 2001: A Space Odyssey then you'll HATE it.

    Steven Spielberg, the director who brought us family-friendly scifi/fantasy hits like "E. T.", Amazing Stories, and Raiders of the Lost Ark, inherited a project that was originally headed by chillingly cold scifi master Stanley Kubrick (2001 A Space Odyssey, Clockwork Orange). Spielberg delivered, 2 years after Kubrick's death, "A. I." The familiar two-letter acronym title ought to spell out for us the direction Spielberg chose to take with Kubrick's material. The result, as you might guess, is a very mixed bag of creepy disturbing brilliance and groan worthy Disney type stuff all jumbled together. Much like putting m&ms on a pizza, some elements should never be mixed.

    Plot: An artificially created robot child navigates the gauntlet of human cruelty while slipping into a Disney-esque subplot (literally Disney) of trying to find the Blue Fairy from the fable Pinocchio so she'll turn him into a real boy. You can practically skip the first half hour of this 2 1/2 hour movie because it amounts to a very predictable and irritating parade of scenes where the robot child is bullied for being a robot, despised by his apathetic 'father' and erratically loved/hated by his weak willed 'mother'. You can literally skip the whole string of clichés and you won't be missing anything. The movie starts to pick up after the 30 min mark when the child finds himself on the run.

    It picks up due to the excellent performance of Jude Law as "Gigolo Joe" a suave, charming, not-too-bright but very loveable cyborg prostitute. Jude plays the character with a very interesting spin: not a soulless hunk of lumbering metal like we've seen in all of our Hollywood robots but as an animated, cat-like, Gene-Kelley-Singin-In-The-Rain street dancer with a ton of personality and some great dance moves. I don't know if Jude won any awards for this performance but he really should have.

    Accompanying Jude's entry into the film, the story becomes considerably darker but not in a predictably melodramatic way like the first part of the film. Rather, we are immersed into a wonderfully nightmarish, satirical portrayal of human cruelty as we witness the renegade robots being subjected to a sickening carnival show in which they are mutilated in horrific ways to the rapturous applause of human crowds. Yes, it's disturbing but it's done with an air of dark comedy like in Terry Gilliam's masterpiece "Brazil" or in Veerhoven's "Robocop" or even Kubrick's own "Clockwork Orange".

    Unfortunately for the final 2 acts of the film we return to Disney territory as the robot child becomes obsessively (and quite stupidly, for an advanced computerized intelligence) rapt in chasing down the imaginary character from a Disney fable, that Blue Fairy. Complicating our enjoyment, there are at least 3 false endings where you feel like the story could've wrapped up on a poetic note, but it keeps going. By the time the real ending happens we're too emotionally exhausted to feel it.

    While being a failure on these levels, "A. I." is an absolute triumph in terms of special effects. The visuals were way ahead of their time in 2001, and they still hold up better than most big budget scifi films today, 20 years later. Unfortunately the delivery screams 1980s Spielberg (E. T.) and might leave you feeling very skeptical about the whole experience. Unless, like I said up front, you're in the mood for E. T. - in that case you'll have a wonderful time. But in either case we can only imagine how Stanley Kubrick had intended to approach his story as originally planned: an evolution of the deeply philosophical & abstract theme presented in "2001" about the newborn lifeform finding its footing in a dark and hostile human world.
    csm23

    Artificial, but not Intelligent

    Steven Spielberg's AI fails to live up to its billing, which really bothers me, because artificial intelligence is such a rich and variegated subject, traversing the fields of biophysics, psychology, philosophy, and even religion, that the payoffs for careful consideration of this subject are potentially great, perhaps even inspiring. Spielberg, it seems, didn't even bother to make a trip to the library, preferring instead to invest awkward and incomprehensible phrases like `human beings are the key to the meaning of existence' with eschatological gravitas.

    Throughout this film, Spielberg drives home one theme over and over and over: humans are more programmatic, both in their thinking, and their behavior, than `mechas.' We watch David's parents first adopt and then abandon the robot boy because of their prejudice about what is `real' and what is not, a deliberate irony seeing as how David is in many ways more human than their biological son. We see a perfectly ridiculous `Flesh Fair' thrown into the movie to embellish this point: the `artificiality' these humans seek to destroy might just as well be their own.

    At worst, the movie has a psychotic message. At the heart of the film, Professor Hobby, who designed David, delivers an impassioned speech, telling him that his singular quest to become a `real' boy at the magical hand of the Blue Fairy is a human flaw which is also humanity's `greatest single' gift: The ability to `chase down dreams. ` Problem is, if a human dreamed of becoming a non-organic being, and could not find surcease from his labors to do so, he would become, if not already, psychotic. Why Mr. `Hobby' couldn't have made the boy to accept himself as he is, which is the essence of human spirituality, seems never to have occurred to him. And so one leaves the movie with a sick feeling in the pit of one's stomach, due largely to the fact that this psychotic idea is presented as an axiom, with religious fervor.

    AI succeeds in being artificial, but not in showing intelligence.
    7epsilon3

    A great movie trying to get out

    A.I. is a difficult film. Some of it is brilliant, while some is dire.

    The acting - Haley Joel Osment as David the mecha (robot) boy is superb. He plays the role with such intelligence and maturity - it's a real achievement and bodes well for his future (if he can avoid hitting the self destruct button like so many other child stars.) Jude Law puts in another solid performance as 'Gigolo Joe' the mecha prostitute. In a similar vein to his previous roles in Gattaca and eXistenZ, he's quirky and somehow detached from reality - it works brilliantly. He's rapidly turning into one of my favourite actors. "Hey Joe - Waddya know?"

    The rest of the cast is very good but doesn't shine, perhaps because their characters were treated lightly and not fully explored. Overall though - good performances by all.

    The sets , costumes and special effects are of a very high standard. Until the last 30 minutes or so, the use of computer graphics is tastefully done and never feel like an excuse to wow the audience with some clever CGI. The scenes at the Flesh Fair (a kind of rock concert where mecha are destroyed for the entertainment of spectators) are powerful, visceral and in your face. The flying and underwater scenes were also very well handled, although not mind blowing.

    Now the downside, and it's a big downside.

    The plot is incredibly disjointed. I didn't expect it to be so obvious that this movie had been directed by two different people and thought Spielberg to be more subtle. There was apparently little attempt by Spielberg to blend his parts of the movie with Kubrick's to create a coherent whole. Instead what we get is a wonderfully dark first 60-90 minutes and then something reminiscent of 'Close Encounters of the E.T. kind' tacked on to make us feel good. As a result, the feel of the film quickly evaporated into a mush. There were a couple of chances to end the movie earlier (notably at the end of the underwater section) and it was a mistake to take the movie beyond these points. The poignancy is lost with repeated attempts to extend and explain the story in unnecessary ways, the scene with David's mother towards the end being especially contrived and saccharin.

    The sum up, this felt like two movies in one - an intelligent, dark and fascinating film mixed one that's formulaic, sentimental and cheesy. Because of this it fails to reach the promised heights and at times feels messy. It's ultimately unsatisfying and left me very disappointed, but not because it's bad, but rather because I expected so much more. As many others have said, I can't help wondering what heights it would have reached if Kubrick hadn't passed away.

    An interesting film, but rent it first as it's not for everyone.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Stanley Kubrick worked on the project for two decades before his death, but along the way, he asked Steven Spielberg to direct, saying it was "closer to his sensibilities." The two collaborated for several years, resulting in Kubrick giving Spielberg a complete story treatment and lots of conceptual art for the movie prior to his death, which Spielberg used to write his own scenario. Contrary to popular belief, Spielberg claims he introduced many of the darker elements into the story, while Kubrick's main contribution consisted mostly of its "sweeter" parts. In a 2002 interview with movie critic Joe Leydon, Spielberg indicated that the middle part of the movie, including the Flesh Fair, was his idea, whereas the first forty minutes, the Teddy bear, and the last twenty minutes were taken straight from Kubrick's story. Ian Watson, who wrote Kubrick's original treatment, confirmed that even the much-criticized ending, assumed by many to be a typical Spielberg addition, was "exactly what (he) wrote for Stanley, and exactly what he wanted, filmed faithfully by Spielberg."
    • Patzer
      Much of the film's early action takes place in Haddonfield, New Jersey. New York City is subsequently shown to be under water. Haddonfield's elevation (81 feet) is lower than that of New York City (87 feet), and it is near both the Atlantic coast and a river leading to the ocean, so Haddonfield should be under water too.
    • Zitate

      [last lines]

      Narrator: [narrating, as David lays next to Monica in bed] That was the everlasting moment he had been waiting for. And the moment had passed, for Monica was sound asleep. More than merely asleep.

      Narrator: [David holds Monica's hand, closing his eyes] Should he shake her she would never rouse. So David went to sleep too. And for the first time in his life, he went to that place... where dreams are born.

    • Crazy Credits
      Sentient Machine Therapist ... JEANINE SALLA Assistant to Mr. Chan ... LAIA SALLA Toe-Bell Ringer ... KATE NEI Cybertronics - Room 93056 ... CLAUDE GILBERT Sentient Machine Security ... DIANE FLETCHER Covert Information Retrieval ... RED KING These are characters from the AI alternate-reality game that was connected to the release of the film, and was played over the Internet. Several of the TV and cinema trailers for AI contained clues for game players, including the name Jeanine Salla listed in the credits at the end of the first trailer. This was the way into the game. The room number given in Claude Gilbert's credit is a further clue to game players.
    • Alternative Versionen
      For the U.S. theatrical release, the Warner Bros. logo appeared before the Dreamworks logo at the beginning of the film, and the poster credits said, "Warner Bros. and Dreamworks Pictures present." Since the U.S. version's home video/DVD rights are owned by Dreamworks, the Dreamworks logo at the beginning of the movie appears before the Warner Bros. logo, and the back of the box's cover art says, "Dreamworks Pictures and Warner Bros. present."
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: A.I.: Artificial Intelligence/The Fast and the Furious/Dr. Dolittle 2/The Princess and the Warrior (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      What About Us
      Written by Al Jourgensen, Paul Barker, Max Brody and Ty Coon (as Deborah Coon)

      Produced by Al Jourgensen and Paul Barker with Robert Ezrin (as Bob Ezrin)

      Performed by Ministry

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 13. September 2001 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official Facebook
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • I.A. Inteligencia Artificial
    • Drehorte
      • Oxbow Park - 3010 SE Oxbow Parkway, Gresham, Oregon, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Warner Bros.
      • DreamWorks Pictures
      • Amblin Entertainment
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 100.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 78.616.689 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 29.352.630 $
      • 1. Juli 2001
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 235.926.635 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 26 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • DTS-ES
      • Dolby Digital EX
      • SDDS
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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