Earlier this year, there was some controversy around the film Late Night with the Devil over its use of generative AI in some of the art in the movie. Teachers are struggling with students using AI to write essays. There are more convincing deep fakes, making it harder to know what is true and what is false in the news. The technology behind AI is moving quickly, and any time there is a shift in technology, it is a prime moment for a movie to be made about that technology. Writer and director Chris Weitz is tackling AI in the new film Afraid.
Curtis (John Cho) works for an advertising agency and is approached by a company selling their new AI tool called AIA (Havana Rose Liu). Curtis brings AIA home to learn more about it. His wife Meredith (Katherine Waterston) is resistant at first, but as her kids, Preston (Wyatt Lindner), Iris (Lukita Maxwell), and Cal (Isaac Bae), immediately bond with AIA, she comes around to see the value in this kind of help. Just as his family is connecting with AIA, Curtis begins to have second thoughts about what this means for those he loves most.
If you’re expecting this to be another M3GAN movie, that isn’t going to be the case. While there are some similar elements, Afraid is a different kind of movie. It doesn’t go the more traditional route of showing how technology is replacing human interaction, but it also doesn’t develop much of a theme beyond that.
The run-time is very breezy 85 minutes, but this movie could have used some time to flesh things out. The first act sets up the story well, but the payoff feels rushed, and it doesn’t build any of the tension that you might hope from a horror movie.Â
That said, the performances in this are solid across the board. Cho has appeared in several of these mid-budget thrillers, and he brings a strong sense of gravitas to them that might get lost in absurdity. Waterston really sells her role as a woman who has been relegated to the position of mom and finds a renewed purpose when she has access to more help. Maxwell does an amazing job as a young woman struggling with how technology impacts her daily life. And David Dastmalchian, star of the aforementioned Late Night with the Devil, makes an appearance that is absolute perfection.
The end of this film is likely to be a point of contention for film viewers. Even though I wish the film had taken a bit longer to get there, I thought it was the end this movie needed. It wasn’t at all what I expected, but I found it to be compelling.
More than anything, I think Afraid is likely to reveal what the viewer already believes about AI. And the fear you feel at the end is likely to be more related to that than anything in the film itself.
This review originally appeared in The Dominion Post on September 1, 2024.
I'm not normally a horror genre person, but this looks interesting and thrilling!