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Moms can be tough — but the apocalypse can be tougher. Netflix's new sci-fi movie I Am Mother, the first feature from Australian director Grant Sputore, is a stripped-down story about trust, faith, and an intimidating WETA-designed robot with a sweetheart's voice and, just maybe, the parental instincts of your average Terminator. Following a limited cast that includes Clara Rugaard, Hillary Swank, and the voice of Rose Byrne recording her lines over an ace physical performance by actor, stuntman, and SFX designer Luke Hawker, I Am Mother is a story of shifting allegiances and slow reveals, layering on the twists at an even clip until it's hard to know what to believe anymore. What's the true nature of this frightening future world? What drove a seemingly benevolent robot to raise a human child as her own, and what was the meaning of where it all led? If you were too stunned by the spectacle to catch every detail of the movie's denouement, it's hard to blame you. Let's examine the finer details of the bittersweet ending of I Am Mother. Future shock The movie begins in what is described as a Repopulation Facility, one day after an extinction event of unknown nature. Text over the opening shots explains that the facility is stocked with 63,000 human embryos; save for the audience's observing eye, there are no humans inside. In a largely wordless opening sequence, the robotic Mother comes to life, seemingly ready to begin the hard task of repopulating the world. It's an interesting scene to go back to once you've seen the movie, and you realize that this robot and the extinction event have a whole lot in common with each other. She's not a failsafe in the case of extinction — she's the cause of it, and Mother is but one of her many faces. Mother doesn't come to life out of some automated altruism. She's a madwoman of a machine — Skynet meets the Matrix meets a metal Mommie Dearest, executing a single-minded plan to remake the human race to suit her own needs and twisted logic. All of this is on display at the start of the movie; you're just not inclined to notice at first. Rose Byrne has a very soothing voice, and caring for a baby with not just nutrition and shelter, but bedside stories and time for play makes the robot seem implicitly compassionate. But these are merely superficial things that keep you trusting Mother long after you should have become suspicious of her, much like our protagonist, the unnamed Daughter character. Missing time The next time stamp we see in the movie marks 13,867 days since the extinction event. You may not have noticed it at first, but right away, there's something wrong here. 13,867 divided by 365 would make for almost 38 years, and Daughter at this time is clearly only half that age. This hasn't been a straight line from day one; something has happened that we haven't seen. As Amy Nicholson's review of the film for Variety puts it, "math whizzes may catch [this] early tip-off." What happened in those missing years before our protagonist was born? The answer, we learn, is tragic. When we're introduced to Daughter, she is nearing the end of her studies with Mother, preparing for an ambiguous exam, steeped at least partially in questions of human ethics. Passing the exam appears vitally important, but why? If Mother and Daughter are the only sentient beings alive, then who are these exam results supposed to impress? The answer is only Mother. By the end of the movie, the implication is clear there were children before Daughter, and they did not measure up. The Daughter we meet is only the latest attempt at raising a woman who passes Mother's muster. We can divine from Mother's actions, from getting better at telling jokes to trying out new cake recipes, that this machine learns from her mistakes, and adapts her behaviors in pursuit of better results. Will this exam end differently? For Daughter's sake, it'd better. Lies my teacher told me The first big wrench in the plot is the arrival of an injured woman at the facility, after Daughter has been led to believe that no other humans except her still exist. This occurs after Daughter has already begun to question Mother thanks to the presence of a mouse in the facility — and you know you're starved for company when a mouse in the house excites you. By the time the woman arrives, desperate and bleeding from a gunshot wound, tiny pinpricks have been poked in Daughter's understanding of the world — holes that the woman's presence, and the questions she raises, will tear wide open. For the first time ever, Daughter's allegiances are tested. Who should she trust? The woman says robots like Mother are killers who destroyed the world, but after examining the woman's bullet wound, Mother claims the woman was shot by another human's weapon — not a so-called Dozer like herself. When Daughter interrogates the woman, she's implored to seek out answers for herself, comparing the bullet inside the woman with one she shot at Mother. When Daughter does so, she learns the woman is telling the truth. Digging deeper, she uses Mother's "fingerprint" to comb through other archives, discovering that Mother has also kept the existence of a previous daughter from her — one she killed and incinerated, just like the mouse, after failing her exam. It's one heck of a reality check. Daughter's allegiances shift dramatically, and things can never be the same. Reality bites Daughter only hesitates in leaving with the woman because of her still-gestating brother, but circumstances force the two to leave in a hurry, before the baby is born. For this and other reasons, Daughter's salvation soon goes south. Daughter's departure is partially motivated by a promise of other humans still alive, taking refuge in far-off mines. The only proof of their existence is drawings the woman has made of them in a copy of Edgar Rice Burroughs' The Gods of Mars — compelling evidence, but hardly conclusive. In joining the woman, Daughter essentially trades Mother in for another maternal figure — one whom she quickly begins rebelling against when she realizes her story doesn't add up. Instead of fleeing to the mines, they journey to a beach full of washed-up shipping containers, one of which the woman has been using as a home. There are no others — she is alone. The woman reveals that she fled the mines years ago, with conditions being so dire that she feels certain everyone she knew there is now dead. From her drawings, it's clear she yearns for companionship. To regain it, she's selfishly stretched the truth, offering Daughter false hope in exchange for her fleeting trust. It backfires, with Daughter realizing that she had kind of a good thing going on back at Mother's house. Now now she's hanging out in a shipping container with a violent, duplicitous weirdo. This kind of thing can happen when you run away from home. Turning the page With the woman having betrayed Daughter's trust, she retreats outside of the shipping container, studying a page of the woman's hand-drawn portraits. Before long, the woman's dog — only the second animal Daughter has ever seen in the flesh — approaches to say hey, as dogs do, seeming to have little awareness of the apocalyptic conditions all around him. They share a moment, and Daughter comes to a decision. When she departs to return to Mother, Daughter leaves behind the page, folded up as a piece of origami in the shape of a dog for the woman to find. The origami piece is similar to the same designs Daughter has been seen making throughout the movie since early childhood, entertaining herself as best she can in a world without PlayStation. Though the folded-up portrait is now mostly unrecognizable, a single watchful eye is emphasized. To the viewer, the origami is a clear reference to a moment in the non-theatrical editions of sci-fi classic Blade Runner, when the protagonist Deckard is left a paper unicorn by a man who may have ties to his past. In that story, it's a roundabout way of indicating that Deckard may be just as much of a robot as the Replicants he's hunting — even if he doesn't know it. But what does the dog origami signify to the woman in this story? These are no pets. But without them... It all goes back to one of the first exchanges between Daughter and the woman, when the woman is healing up in the facility. Sneering at perceived condescension on Daughter's part, the woman asks if she only regards her as something trivial to take care of — "a little pet friend," as she puts it. Dogs are, of course, domesticated animals, who can be trained to behave as their owners expect them to. As the woman comes to find out by the movie's end, she's not so independent as she first appears. Matter of fact, she's not even close to being outside of Mother's control. As we learn at the end of her story, she's been kept alive and taken care of quite deliberately by Mother's machinations, all to play a role in her master plan for humanity's future. She's not a survivor of her own accord — as the origami seems to symbolize, she's merely a pet after all. But the woman's not just a pet, not really. She's a vital part of Mother's carefully designed ecosystem. When Daughter is watching a nature documentary earlier in the movie, a telling line of voiceover can be heard in reference to some wild animals, maybe long extinct. It's a short line, but in retrospect, it's clearly a reference to the woman "Part wolf, part dog, these are no pets. But without them, the Eskimos would not manage..." Homecoming When Daughter returns to the facility, granted easy access by the army of robots outside, Mother finally shows who she really is. She tries to bring Daughter into her trust by telling her that, thanks to her guidance, she's not like other humans. She's meant for better things, and has been provided better resources, more chances, than the people who once lived outside. It's a regular Aunt Becky situation. Daughter is unmoved, taking custody of her brother and spitting venom at Mother for killing the children who didn't measure up. Suddenly, we're in Terminator meets Aliens, with Daughter sprinting for her life while protecting a defenseless child from an unstoppable enemy. This attempt at escape quickly becomes untenable with the revelation that Mother is not just one robot, but all robots — a unified single consciousness, practically unkillable, an army unto herself. And you thought your mom was tough. Daughter abandons the fighting approach and instead begs for a chance to prove herself as an independent caretaker of her brother, pleading for trust. After all, she's earned it, right? She's passed her exam, right? The appeal works, and Mother acquiesces, stopping the invasion of the station from the other Dozers outside, and letting Daughter fatally shoot her right in her heart — or CPU. Daughter has earned her independence. The facility is hers. Controlled opposition Back at the beach, the woman, alone again, doodles a picture of Daughter on another book page in silent contemplation. Because her operational security is apparently kind of trash, she only just now finds a sort of blinking red tracking device that Mother has previously been seen building and slipping into her bag. Upon discovering the device, she is promptly approached and cornered by yet another body of Mother. As it turns out, it's the woman's turn to get a knowledge bomb dropped on her head, with Mother revealing that she's much more responsible for the woman's years of survival than the movie has yet let on. It is chillingly implied that she is not just a useful Idiot for Mother's machinations, but a creation of Mother herself, lab-grown and micromanaged just as much as Daughter has been. Perhaps she was among the first people Mother raised from the embryo stores, 38 years ago, before she was found and raised as an apparent orphaned child by a kindly couple of extinction event survivors. It seems that her arrival to the facility didn't interrupt Daughter's exam, but was actually a key part of it, with Mother having been pulling the levers this whole time from behind the curtain like a regular Wizard of Oz. She played her role to perfection — and now that Daughter has passed her exam, her continuing existence is unnecessary. She dies offscreen by Mother's hand, her role in the plan concluded. I'm the mother now I Am Mother ends with Daughter back where she started, but with her situation completely changed. She's learned the truth about Mother, to a certain extent, and knows she cannot trust her. But she's also now experienced and been lied to by the outside world as well. As Blink-182 once put it, "I guess this is growing up." Though her journey outside the facility with the woman was short, it was immensely consequential. Now she is, Daughter feels, a wiser person who's learned to trust herself — not the outside world, nor the robot who raised her. She'll pass this wisdom on to her brother, a helpless child whom she is now determined to raise. It's a development that re-contextualizes the story you've been watching, right down to its very title. She's the mother now. Make no mistake, though — this is far from an empowering ending, however much it may feel like one to Daughter herself. In killing and replacing Mother, she is only fulfilling Mother's master plan of creating a newer, better version of the human race. She feels independent, but she's not. This was all a part of Mother's plan. As the movie comes to a close, Daughter regards the thousands of remaining embryos in the facility, preparing for the daunting task ahead. Mother as she knows her is gone, but her plan lives on. No matter what Daughter does next, she will always be her Mother's child.
VIVAShowbiz - Thor: Love and Thunder menjadi salah satu film Marvel Cinematic Universe ( MCU) yang paling ditunggu-tunggu penggemar tahun ini. Tayang di bioskop sejak 6 Juli 2022 lalu, film besutan Taika Waititi ini mengisahkan kelanjutan petualangan Thor (Chris Hemsworth) yang kini kedatangan musuh bernama Gorr the God Butcher (Christian Bale). Warning Major I Am Mother spoilers ahead. I’m guessing that’s why you clicked on this article! I Am Mother, a new Netflix sci-fi film from director Grant Sputore out today, is an ambitious undertaking. The entire film features only three characters A robot called Mother voiced by Rose Byrne, a teenage human girl called Daughter Clara Rugaard, and an unnamed injured woman on the run Hilary Swank. All we know is that there has been a major human extinction event of some sort, the earth’s surface is contaminated, and the robot has been designed to repopulate the human race. Considering the simple set-up, Sputore pulls off an impressively exhilarating, high stakes thriller, complete with a plot that keeps you guessing. Even if you did correctly predict the ending, you probably experienced some gasp-inducing moments along the way. Still, with an ambitious sci-fi thriller inevitably comes a complicated and confusing ending. I admit that I had to watch the I Am Mother ending several times before I fully understood it, and I’m betting you may have some questions. So read on if you want to hear how I Am Mother ends, and don’t if you’d rather avoid I Am Mother spoilers. WHAT IS THE I AM MOTHER PLOT TWIST? WHAT ARE THE BIG I AM MOTHER SPOILERS? Like any good sci-fi thriller, there are several I Am Mother plot twists. The first is, surprise, Swank’s character—who is listed simply as “Wounded Woman” in the credits—was lying to Daughter. She doesn’t live in a commune of human survivors; she fled them years ago after the others went mad with hunger. She hasn’t seen another human in years and was simply manipulating Daughter to help her escape. The second plot twist is that the Mother-bot Mo-bot? I’m going to call her a Mo-bot has been trying to design her own, new, perfect human race—more on that below. The third twist is that Mo-bot’s “body” aka the robot suit is not where her consciousness lives, but that she is, in fact, “everywhere,” which apparently means she can control all of the droids. Photo Netflix WHAT WAS MOTHER’S PLAN IN I AM MOTHER? IS THE ROBOT IN I AM MOTHER EVIL? Yes, but not quite in the way that Swank’s character accuses her of being evil. As it turns out, Mo-bot does care about Daughter, as evidenced by the way she lets her escape when Swank threatens Daughter’s life. However, as is revealed in the second twist, Mo-bot has been raising a new, “smarter, more ethical” human race. In other words, instead of just repopulating the earth, as she was designed to do, Mo-bot kills any children that don’t live up to her perfect standards of humanity, thus shedding a new, dark light on Daughter’s “lessons.” “I was raised to value human life above all else,” says Mother. “I couldn’t stand by and watch humanity slowly succumb to its self-destructive nature.” Daughter, says Mother, is the only human that has passed the test and been allowed to live so far. Mother is also responsible for controlling the droids that killed off any humans who survived the extinction event. HOW DOES I AM MOTHER END? Stream It Or Skip It 'Alaska Daily' On ABC, Where Hilary Swank Is A Canceled Star Reporter Who Starts Over In Anchorage Hilary Swank Reveals Why She Hasn’t Reprised Her The Next Karate Kid’ Role on Cobra Kai’ During The Drew Barrymore Show’ “No One’s Ever Called Me” ABC 2022-23 Schedule Network Adds 'Jeopardy' Spinoff, New Series with Hilary Swank, Niecy Nash Stream It Or Skip It 'The Hunt' on HBO Max, a Violent Mess of a Free-For-All Political Satire Alright, this is where it gets complicated. Trapped in the bunker, with her all-powerful Mo-bot controlling everything around her, Daughter offers to “take care of them myself.” She says, “That’s what you’ve raised me to do, isn’t it? Take care of my family? So let me.” Mo-bot, seemingly convinced, reaches out a glowing hand toward her new infant son, who was recently born from Mo-bot’s embryos. There’s an army of droids outside, who are trying to break down the bunker’s door, but suddenly, presumably at Mo-bot’s command, they stop. “If you ever need to find me,” Mo-bot begins. “I won’t,” interrupts Daughter. Then Daughter shoots Mo-bot, starts crying, and falls to the ground. The second-to-last scene of the film is another droid, using Mo-bot’s voice, who visits Swank’s character in her hidey-hole. “Funny that you’ve survived so long,” Mo-bot tells Swank. “As if someone’s had a purpose for you. Until now.” Then Mo-bot slams the door shut, presumably to murder Swank. The very last scene of the film is Daughter singing “Baby of Mine”—a song we heard at the beginning of the film when Daughter was being born—to her baby brother, now all alone in the bunker. Photo Netflix DOES THE I AM MOTHER ENDING MAKE SENSE? I mean, I guess? But also Not really? It’s unclear why Mo-bot would be convinced by Daughter’s request to raise the new human race by herself, after Mo-bot just gave a speech about how humans are inherently self-destructive. And why bother to shoot Mo-bot if Mo-bot can just exist anywhere she wants to? Just for the symbolism? Also, if Mo-bot can control all those droids, and possibly other things, why did she spend so much time running around the hallways earlier in the film? IS THERE AN I AM MOTHER AFTER CREDITS SCENE? Nope. Be free! Stream I Am Mother on Netflix Tags Ending Explained hilary swank I Am Mother Netflix Motherherself reveals this near the end of the movie when one of her droids visits Woman's home and speaks to her using Mother's voice: "Funny that you've survived so long.
I Am Mother ending explained. See below. Pic credit Netflix The groundbreaking indie sci-fi film I Am Mother debuted on Netflix this weekend, bringing a fresh take on a tired robotic trope. The industry is oversaturated with movies and television shows involving robots attempting to take over humanity. I Am Mother manages to do something different by isolating the story and making it more personal. Moreso, the ending leaves a lot for the viewer to consider as the credits roll. I Am Mother is a movie that believes its audience is smart, and it doesn’t spoon feed them the answers. But still, some aspects of the movie’s conclusion are more ambiguous than others. What does the I Am Mother ending mean and what happened? Here is everything to know about the film’s mind-bending finale. Sign up for our newsletter! The film stars Rose Byrne as the robot named Mother and centers on her relationship with a girl she raised from embryo to birth called Daughter Clara Rugaard-Larsen. Through much of the first half of the film, the story portrays a convincing mother and daughter relationship between robot and human. This dynamic is thanks to a brilliantly understated vocal performance by Byrne as the mysterious robot. What the film reveals is humanity died off from disease according to Mother and Mother herself is tasked with repopulating the Earth in a protected laboratory. Her first embryo of choice being Daughter, who she feeds, trains, and educates to be a better human than the ones before her. However, this turns out to be untrue as a stranger only known as Woman emerges outside the laboratory bunker and Daughter lets her inside despite Mother’s warnings to keep the outside world from getting in due to toxic disease. What Daughter eventually learns is there was never a disease that killed humans — only robots controlled by a single consciousness powered by Mother. To make matters scarier, Daughter is not the first embryo girl Mother brought to life, and she finds ashes of previous “Daughters” Mother killed because they failed a test. Once this happens, Daughter escapes the laboratory bunker with Woman out of fear for her life. What happens to Daughter in I Am Mother? Pic credit Netflix After escaping, she follows Woman to a shipping container where she lives. At this point, and Daughter realizes that Woman lied to her about there being other survivors. The problem is that Daughter has a brother being born and refuses to leave him behind for her mortality. Woman stresses that looking after one’s self is not a sin. She can be selfish for her own survival. Daughter doesn’t listen and returns to Mother to rescue her baby brother. This is the moment the story becomes incredibly refreshing and different. As Daughter returns to the lab, she is greeted by Mother with open arms. Mother is still testing whether or not she raised Daughter correctly. As the film reaches its climax, Daughter confronts Mother, who is holding her brother. It’s at this point that Mother reveals why she did not kill her like the previous “Daughters.” She is more elevated than any other human before her. Daughter is more selflessly motivated and nurturing. Daughter manages to trick her robot mother into giving her the baby, runs, and traps Mother’s leg in an electric door. As Mother grows aggravated by her Daughter’s actions, she begins sending all the outside robots to break in and stop Daughter. Daughter than pleads with Mother to give her a chance to be the person she raised her to be, to allow her to restart the human race and teach the next generation of humans to be selfless as Mother intended. Knowing the daughter’s actions are not selfish, she calls off all the outside robots and orders Daughter to shoot her in the chest where her CPU chip resides. However, Mother hints that she will be around if Daughter ever needs her. Daughter says, “I won’t” and then kills Mother. What happened to Woman in I Am Mother? See below. Pic credit Netflix What happened to Woman in I Am Mother? This point of the film is where everything becomes a bit unclear. As the movie comes to a finish, it cuts back to Woman who is drawing a picture of Daughter in one of her books. Soon after, she finds a GPS tracker inside her bag, obviously placed there by Mother. She realizes Mother is standing right outside the shipping container door. Mother makes a menacing comment about Woman trying to steal her Daughter, and Woman explains she was never going to hurt the girl. Mother finally makes an interesting quip about Woman’s existence, saying “Tell me. Do you remember your mother? Curious, isn’t it? That you’ve survived so long where others have not. As if someone’s had a purpose for you. Until now.” Right after this, Mother slams the container door, and it is implied Woman dies. The reasons for this are not entirely clear but could fall under two different possibilities. The first possibility is that Mother was also testing Woman to see whether she could be selfless among humanity on the outside. The film implies Woman survived at the expense of others. This revelation could be why Mother felt the need to exterminate her existence. The second possibility is that Woman was intentionally placed on the outside to encounter Daughter and test whether Daughter would choose selfish behavior over anything else. Right after Daughter passed the test, Woman served her purpose, and Mother felt the need to rid her of ever trying to influence Daughter again. Either motivation proves that Woman was meant to serve a purpose, and once that purpose ended, Mother felt the need to end her existence. Woman’s ending is a sad one, and viewers have a lot to ponder. At what point do selfishness and self-protection collide? What is the responsibility of humanity when it comes to ensuring that future generations like Daughter flourish? Viewers have several questions worth debating. To consider the relationship between Humanity and technology, I Am Mother is worth a watch. I Am Mother is streaming on Netflix now.
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It is possible that Woman was a previous iteration, but one factor leads me to think it isn't. The embryo Mother removes on DAY 1 after extinction event is identified as APX01. The Daughter we see as a near adult and helping Woman, I will call APX 03, based on the identification on the test unit she used. We first see her is on DAY 13,867, almost 38 years after the extinction event. I take it that APX03 was the third iteration since there are three embryos missing from the female storage stack. Since the age of the character Woman is not defined, I think it is fair to say she could be older than 38, I think she looks older. Hilary Swank is 44. So it seems more likely that Woman was six years old when the extinction event happened. Which would make it entirely plausible she was familiar with The Tonight Show. Iam watching a movie (aku menonton sebuah film) I am playing a volleyball in the beach (aku bermain bola voli di pantai) I am cooking a foood with my mother (aku memasak makanan dengan ibuku) I am dancing alone (aku berdansa sendiri) I am telling you about something (aku mengatakan pada mu tentang sesuatu) ï»żThe needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. Netflix By Published on June 17th, 2019 Ending Explained is a recurring series in which we explore the finales, secrets, and themes of interesting movies and shows, both new and old. In this entry, we discuss the ending of I Am Mother. You can’t trust a robot. They’re not us. They’re them. We gave them life, and they’ll fight to keep it. In James Barrat’s Our Final Invention, the author warns that once artificial intelligence is achieved, self-preservation will kick in and our destruction will be their driving purpose. Even when they claim to have our best interest in mind, they’re likely to transform one of our cities into a meteor only to drop it upon us as a means of pressing the reset button. We see you, Ultron. Our pop culture has prepared us for the final war of man vs. robot. Filmmaker Grant Sputore has a different point of view. His feature debut I Am Mother streaming on Netflix proposes a machine with humanity’s perseverance at heart. As he told us, “What differentiates Mother from pretty much all the robots that we’ve seen in films of this nature before is that she’s motivated by a love of humanity and that she wants to do what’s right by the humans as opposed to how most movie robots are either worried about themselves or they’re worried about the continuation of their own species.” By the film’s climax, that love can be terrible and rather terrifying. Ease up on that hug mom, before you break that poor baby’s neck. In the film, an unknown extinction-level event has transformed the planet into a wasteland. Mother Rose Byrne operates inside a bunker built for the purpose of regrowing humanity from scratch. At the start of the film, we see her extract an embryo from a freezer containing hundreds more and nurture it into existence. Daughter Clara Rugaard matures under the robot’s strict guidance, adhering to the education presented and never questioning the knowledge. Until a Woman Hilary Swank who should not be alive comes knocking on their doorstep. The Woman’s story that others have survived beyond the bunker’s walls throws the relationship between Mother and Daughter into chaos, and the family unit is shattered. When Daughter discovers evidence a human jawbone inside an incinerator that Mother has raised but eliminated failed children before her, she begins to believe The Woman’s saga of survivors huddled deep within the Earth. In an effort to escape, The Woman takes Daughter hostage threatening to end her life if Mother does not open the bunker’s airlock. Mother agrees, and the two humans flee into the wilderness. There, Daughter discovers the existence of hunter-killer robots and stations seemingly designed to terraform the Earth. The Woman brings Daughter to her home, which is not deep within a hidden mine but in a furnished shipping container filled with sad little leftover trinkets. The Woman explains that she broke free from the other survivors ages ago and solitude is essential to a long life. Too many mouths equal betrayal and violence. Her pathetic revelation drives Daughter back to the bunker, which is now surrounded by robotic drones. They let her pass, and Daughter rescues her infant Brother freshly birthed from his chamber. Mother confronts Daughter. She discloses that the drones are just an extension of her intelligence. She goes on even further detailing how Mother was responsible for the extinction event. Humanity was racing to kill itself and the planet, and Mother came to the same conclusion that Ultron did under the programming of Tony Stark and Bruce Banner a global reset was necessary, but this time a strict understanding of morality and philosophy would prevent future humans from racing towards doomsday. Horrified, Daughter begs Mother to allow her to raise Brother and take control of the rest of the bunker’s embryos. Confident that her teachings have taken root inside Daughter, Mother concedes to the child’s demands. Daughter turns a shotgun upon Mother and exterminates the robot vessel. Back at The Woman’s shipping container, Mother appears in another body. The asks The Woman why she doesn’t remember her birth parents. Why was she able to survive so long alone? What is her purpose? Damn. The Woman is the first Daughter born from the bunker, or at the very least, an earlier iteration. She was always designed to test the most recent Daughter’s ethical education. Having completed that task, Mother slams the shipping container door, and the implication is that she will exterminate The Woman. There is no longer any point to her life. Earlier in the movie, we are privy to several classroom lessons between Mother and Daughter. The focus of the teachings centers around the greater good compared to the value of a single life. When Daughter returns to the bunker under the threat of death to retrieve her newborn Brother, she exhibits an understanding of Mother’s Spock-like logic. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. Mother’s hope is that Daughter will guide humanity away from its selfish and suicidal tendencies. I appreciate Mother’s optimism, but what are the chances that Daughter can relay the warm logic of the greater good to her children, her grandchildren, and great-grandchildren? Has Mother done enough to prevent humanity from tumbling to its demise once more? If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. I Am Mother concedes that Daughter is not the first experiment and in doing so surmises that she won’t be the last. If Daughter fails to pull humanity out of its infinite death spiral, then Mother will move on to Plan C or Plan Z as it may be. What separates Mother from Ultron or Skynet or HAL 9000 is her staunch faith that we can and will do better. Her ultimate goal is the preservation of humanity, and she’s going to do whatever she can to make sure that happens. Hopefully, she can figure that out before the heat-death of the sun. Or she may forever continue her experiment to space and beyond. Related Topics Ending Explained, Grant Sputore, I Am Mother, Netflix Brad Gullickson is a Weekly Columnist for Film School Rejects and Senior Curator for One Perfect Shot. When not rambling about movies here, he's rambling about comics as the co-host of Comic Book Couples Counseling. Hunt him down on Twitter MouthDork. He/Him Recommended Reading Extraction 2’ Ups the Ante and Delivers Big-Time Thrills Good enough to make you forgive Netflix for the abomination that is Red Notice.’ What’s New to Stream on Netflix for June 2023 Action fans rejoice! Tyler Rake is back in Extraction 2.’ What’s New to Stream on Netflix for May 2023 Sylvester Stallone! Arnold Schwarzenegger! Dean Martin! What’s New to Stream on Netflix for April 2023 Why watch new movies when you can marathon Hitchcock or the Bourne trilogy instead? . 406 421 236 106 205 237 286 272

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