Michael Scott
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The dangers of Artificial Intelligence are not a new thing in Hollywood. Ever since the rise of the computer, we have theorized and utilized our fear of the unknown to create terrifying new scenarios that entertain us in movie form for literally DECADES. Terminator and Terminator 2 capitalized on it with great success, but over the years, it has faded into the background as technology has become more and more mainstream. However, the rise of AI algorithms in the last couple of years has seen a considerable resurgence. Films like M3gan and AfrAId have succeeded mildly, but I was genuinely curious about Drew Hancock’s feature film debut with Companion. This is the man who much of Blue Mountain State (all hail the Thad), and the trailer really caught my eye. It promised a little bit of a reverse M3gan, and some tasty little gore bits as well with Jack Quaid (who has impressed me ever since he starred on The Boys). End result, you might ask? Maybe not perfect, but a fun little reverse AI thriller.
The film opens up with an idyllic little rom-com/horror cliché. Josh (Jack Quaid) and Iris (Sophie Thatcher head up to a remote house in the middle of nowhere for a little get-together. Iris is nervous because Josh’s friend Kat (Megan Suri) notoriously hates her, but nothing to worry about. Josh and Iris are gaga for each other, and nothing is going to stop this from being the best weekend ever. That is, until all hell breaks loose when their host, Sergey (Rupert Friend), tries to assault Iris, resulting in the young woman defending herself by stabbing the guy. While normally that would result in everyone trying to find out if Iris was OK, things turn at a right angle when Josh shuts Iris down.
Yes, I said “shuts Iris down”. Turns out that Iris isn’t exactly a real person. She’s an EXTREMELY expensive and complex “companion” robot with an artificial consciousness. You see, Sergey, the murder, and even Iris getting shut down was part of the plan. Josh and Kat had hacked into Iris’s system, turning off her safety protocols, and subsequently set her and Sergey up in a situation where she would be forced to defend herself so that the duo could put all the blame on the robot, and take Sergey’s millions.
Companion is not super duper nuanced, with plot points that even unseasoned viewers will probably see a mile away. But it does come across as charming and fairly clever as it flips the script on the usual evil AI motif. This time switching the AI to be the good guy, and the humans to end up being the actual monsters. Instead of AI gone awry, we have AI evolving in an actual human way, while highlighting just how big a monster humans can actually be. It may not be super inventive, but it’s kind of clever and sets itself apart from the glut of evil AI films. Jack Quaid is especially delicious as the diabolical Josh, who seems sweet and gangly cute on the outside, but absolutely twisted and vile on the inside. Sophie Thatcher as Iris does an equally impressive job keeping that sweet and likable exterior AND interior as she evolves throughout the 95-minute film. Again, this is nothing to write home about, but overall it’s a solid thriller that makes good use of the question of “who is the bigger monster?” question that arises.
Rated R for strong violence, sexual content, and language throughout.
4K Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• Love, Eli – Harvey Guillén and Lukas Gage explore the fun, lighthearted relationship of Patrick and Eli. Explore their supposed first encounter at a costume party and how that develops into a unique love.
• AI Horror – Director Drew Hancock breaks down the fusion of
Final Score:

Director/writer Drew Hancock’s first feature film is a subversive and genuinely enjoyable take on a decades-old genre. While I would definitely categorize the film as a dark thriller vs. a horror film, there is some definite overlap with some of the gory bits cropping up in the last 30 minutes. It’s a little light on story, but overall a clever little twist that genuinely works. The 4K UHD from Warner Brothers is very good, with great video and audio, but some rather anemic extras by modern standards. At the end of the day, a fun watch.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Sophie Thatcher, Jack Quaid, Luka Gage, Megan Suri, Harvey Guillen, Rupert Friend
Directed by: Drew Hancock
Written by: Drew Hancock
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 HEVC
Audio: English: Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 Core)
Subtitles: English SDH, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Cantonese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Polish, Swedish
Studio: Warner Brothers
Rated: R
Runtime: 97 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: April 1st, 2025
Recommendation: Solid Watch