A young man faces the abrupt loss of his friend.A young man faces the abrupt loss of his friend.A young man faces the abrupt loss of his friend.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Aska
- The Lost Trees Band
- (as Aska Matsumiya)
Monica White Eagle
- Meredith
- (uncredited)
Chad Everhart
- Teenager at Concert
- (uncredited)
David Glenney
- Aidan
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A shy, young man goes through his mundane life without companionship. Until he learns to dream.
Spike Jonze has made some bizarre-looking movies to say normal-sounding things. I'm Here is one such with a basic premise so basic, you wonder if the facade he uses is just a gimmick for drawing an audience. But his imagery takes you beyond petty suspicions and introduces some remarkable, relate-able characters. In fact, it almost makes you feel that that was the only way to make the film. It is a truly commendable quality of this short.
This is a wonderful effort and takes just 30 minutes to say effectively what many full-length features fail to in two hours. A must watch .
Spike Jonze has made some bizarre-looking movies to say normal-sounding things. I'm Here is one such with a basic premise so basic, you wonder if the facade he uses is just a gimmick for drawing an audience. But his imagery takes you beyond petty suspicions and introduces some remarkable, relate-able characters. In fact, it almost makes you feel that that was the only way to make the film. It is a truly commendable quality of this short.
This is a wonderful effort and takes just 30 minutes to say effectively what many full-length features fail to in two hours. A must watch .
Selfless sacrifice in the android community given the warm, soft focused, fuzzy treatment in a well realised near future world.
Retro robots in the future, same as here and now, but robots stomp about. A quiet, lonesome, librarian robot fixates on a sleeker fem-bot with some questionable robot friends, enters into a one-sided relationship, gives too much, the end. It's the kind of film that doesn't matter, it's slight, it's light, it's quite simple. But give it the half hour it asks, invest a bit of time and let it flow past you, and it's a sweet slice of everyday life. The ups and downs and all the angles of relationships. Filmed in a washed-out sunny California vibe, it's not a technical effort, but it does have an extended pop video feel. Subtle animation give life to the robots, and for all the lack of reality, the characters are believable, and sympathetic.
I really like this type of film, as it reminds me of French movies where it's more about the characters and their environment. One of the bleakest films I have seen in ages. All characters are unhappy souls, surviving in a grim world, unable to improve their lot. The cinematography is stark and bare. It's an amazing work and everything I had hoped for from an artistic standpoint. It's a world where the only thing that keeps lives afloat is the sensitivity of the bilaterally desperately needy relationships on display. It's a very short movie -- too short for my tastes -- but it gets 7/10 in my ratings scale, so check it out.
Did you know
- TriviaThe actors would wear robot costumes but then the eyes and mouths would be CGI'd.
Details
- Runtime
- 31m
- Color
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