A short film about a mother who was hit by a rare condition that sees her lift off the ground at a slow but ever increasing rate, her husband and daughter are forced to come to terms with losing her.
Sunspring
Sunspring is a 2016 experimental science fiction short film entirely written by an artificial intelligence bot using neural networks.[1] It was conceived by BAFTA-nominated filmmaker Oscar Sharp and NYU AI researcher Ross Goodwin[2][3] and produced by film production company, End Cue along with Allison Friedman and Andrew Swett. It stars Thomas Middleditch, Elisabeth Grey, and Humphrey Ker as three people, namely H, H2, and C, living in a future world and eventually connecting with each other through a love triangle. The script of the film was authored by a recurrent neural network called long short-term memory (LSTM) by an AI bot named Benjamin.
Originally made for the Sci-Fi-London film festival's 48hr Challenge, it was released online by technology news website Ars Technica on 9 June 2016
Review
The Karman Line was surprisingly funny and interesting to watch as it was a problem that they couldn't fix. Seeing how the family deal with the problem was interesting from cutting holes on their roof to using a crane to meet the mother. I would recommend this to certain people but not everyone.
Sunspring was a little bit boring and was not really my kind of film. In my opinion it was slow and made no sense since it was written by and AI. I would not recommend this film to anyone.
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