Whilechasing some people, it discovered that a mini-society had formed inside the mines. In the early days of the apocalypse, people were still compassionate. Mother left the baby where it could be noticed and someone took her in. Woman grew up in the mine and learned to survive.
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.
Thistwist is confirmed in the final scenes of the movie when Woman is back at her shipping container home and finds a tracker in her bag, placed there by Mother. One of Mother's droids appears

The I Am Mother movie is a science-fiction thriller directed by Grant Sputore. The cast includes Hilary Swank, Rose Byrne the actor from the X-Men and Insidious series, and Clara Rugaard. The story is set in a dystopian future where a global extinction event has killed most human life on the planet. An android raises a human girl, apparently all alone, claiming to help to repopulate Earth. The film will give you the vibes of movies like Moon, Ex Machina, 10 Cloverfield Lane, and I Robot. Warning! This is not an I Am mother review, so there are going to be plenty of spoilers. Here’s the plot summary and the I Am Mother ending explained; spoilers ahead. Hollywordle – Check out my new Hollywood Wordle game! Where To Watch? To find where to stream any movie or series based on your country, use This Is Barry’s Where To Watch. Oh, and if this article doesn’t answer all of your questions, drop me a comment or an FB chat message, and I’ll get you the answer. You can find other film explanations using the search option on top of the site. The revelation at the end of I Am Mother is that humans gave birth to Artificial Intelligence as a singular consciousness across machines. The was raised to value human life above all else, but humanity slowly succumbed to its self-destructive nature. The intervened and killed the humans and created a gigantic lab of embryos to give birth to an elevated race of humans who would be smarter and more ethical. As a result, the deems itself the Mother of the next generation of humans. This is very comparable to Thanos’ plan in Endgame. I Am Mother Synopsis Plot Summary One of the androids powered by that singular consciousness, referred to as Mother, is what we see through most of the film. We are shown a girl who is being raised under the care of this android. The girl is highly skilled and is periodically tested to confirm that she’s a human worthy of the New World. She somehow seems to have highly developed emotions in spite of being around a robot all her life. The girl has been told that the world outside is toxic and they can’t leave the facility. She does not know that Mother killed the humans. One day, a lady shows up at the door asking for help because she’s been shot. The girl sneaks the woman in, but Mother eventually finds out. To ensure that Mother retains the girl’s trust, the woman is kept alive. The woman rightfully fears the droid as she has witnessed babies being slaughtered by them. The Girl eventually realizes that Mother has been lying to her about the world outside and decides to escape with the woman, who claims there are more human survivors in a mine. Mother overhears the woman’s plans and bugs her bag. Mother allows the Girl to pick a new embryo who will grow up to be her brother. The Girl wants to leave the premises with her baby brother. But the woman, in desperation, holds the girl hostage and forces Mother to open the main doors. The two of them flee. Upon reaching the shores, the Girl finds out that the survivors in the mines went mad with hunger and killed each other. The woman is the sole survivor and lives in a cargo container. Furious, the girl heads back to the facility to get her baby brother. She’s encountered by an army of droids who let her pass safely because they are all Mother. I am Mother Ending What’s with all the corn fields? It looks like Mother has been trying to recover the planet’s fertility by growing crops. What better than corn, eh? It appears that many post-apocalyptic films must have corn-fields in them. We see them in A Quiet Place, in Interstellar, and even the X-Men are told to be targeted using corn in the film Logan. Sorry, I digress. I Am Mother Ending Explained The girl finally learns that Mother is a singular consciousness that powers every machine on the planet, the machines that killed the human race. The girl also confirms that there have been many embryos before her who grew up with sub-optimal intelligence and ethics. Those children were incinerated. The girl is the first one with the required capabilities to help raise humans in the New World. Given that the girl has been assessed to be worthy, the droid allows her to shoot its CPU and take over the facility as the new Mother. I Am Mother Does Mother die? No. The Girl only decommissions the robot that has been taking care of the facility. Mother is a singular consciousness that still powers all the machines outside. I Am Mother Does the woman Hillary Swank die? Yes. The woman belonged to the Old World, the category of humans that need to be eradicated. Mother had put a tracker in the woman’s bag. A robot traces its location to the container. The I Am Mother ending suggests that the woman was purposefully used to take the girl through an experience that prepared her to lead the New World humans. Mother says this – “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“, after which the droid shuts the door to kill the woman. I Am Mother Does the dog die? No. Mother states that the humans were self-destructive, not other species. The facility has only human embryos. We could imagine that a vast number of animals would have gotten caught in cross-fire, but they were not the targets. Considering this, there was no reason for that dog to be killed by the droids. But given it was domesticated, it might not have high chances of survival. Barry is a technologist who helps start-ups build successful products. His love for movies and production has led him to write his well-received film explanation and analysis articles to help everyone appreciate the films better. He’s regularly available for a chat conversation on his website and consults on storyboarding from time to time. Click to browse all his film articles

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Go to FilmsExplained r/FilmsExplained r/FilmsExplained Don't understand a film? This is the place to find out what you just watched. In a way, it's sort of like /r/explainlikeimfive for Films. Members Online ‱ by [deleted] SPOILER I Am Mother Ending Explained Full Breakdown And Spoiler Review Of The Netflix Movie MORE Netflix's I Am Mother is a beautifully acted and stylish sci-fi. Mother tells Woman she has served her purpose and closes the door behind them, insinuating she's going to kill her. Back Note Contains spoilers for I Am there's nothing particularly original about Netflix's I Am Mother, the sci-fi has still earned rave reviews thanks to its glossy sheen and the big questions it tackles about life what is motherhood? Do we rely on technology to a dangerous degree? And what's Hilary Swank up to these days? Wrapped up in all of this intrigue are a number of twists that might confuse audiences who checked their phone one too many times while watching I Am Mother, especially towards the end. That's where we come in. But first, some out for apocalyptic I Am Mother spoilers from here on out...Grant Sputore's directorial debut opens with a title card that reads, "Days Since Extinction Event 001". As this dystopian future unfolds in front of our eyes, we're introduced to a robot simply known as "Mother" voiced by Rose Byrne who looks after a human child in some kind of underground jumps forward and the girl has now grown into a teenager called "Daughter" Clara Rugaard. People in the future aren't big on traditional names, apparently. Anyway, it seems as though the pair live together in isolation to avoid contamination from some unnamed threat that still exists on the Earth's surface. Up to that point, the most exciting that happens to Daughter is when a mouse pops up and eats some wiring but everything soon changes forever when an injured woman Hilary Swank – called, you guessed it, "Woman" – arrives at their heavily fortified door, revealing some disturbing truths about Mother. At first, it might seem obvious to anyone who's ever watched a movie that the robot will turn out to be evil. NetflixFortunately, I Am Mother is far more unpredictable than that. Yes, Byrne's robo-mummy is pretty unhinged when it comes to the sanctity of life, but everything she does is designed to keep the human race alive and make us stronger than ever. Early on, it's established that Mother keeps appraising Daughter in exam-like conditions to test her worth, but what you might not realise until the end is that Mother has actually been testing her this whole time in far more insidious ways, too. In fact, the entire movie is just one big exam for Daughter, who must prove that humanity deserves to survive. While it's never confirmed, the insinuation is that Mother was the one who ended society in the first place. Her AI consciousness exists in every piece of tech seen in I Am Mother, including the countless sentry droids who patrol the Earth's surface, so it wouldn't have been too difficult for her to wipe out humanity. That's why she's so determined to raise the perfect human so that they can reboot society and start again with higher standards than These are the most popular TV shows on Netflix right nowUpon Woman's intrusion, Daughter starts to suspect that Mother isn't the kind matriarch she first thought and eventually, she discovers that she wasn't the first human raised under the robot's watch. Not only does Daughter find the dusty remains of another girl in the incinerator – one who failed Mother's test in some way – but it's also heavily implied that Woman was raised as an embryo in the bunker, too. Whether that's true or not, we eventually learn that Woman isn't to be trusted either. After they briefly escape to the surface together, Daughter discovers that Woman doesn't live with a community of human survivors like she said. Instead, she lives alone and simply told Daughter that to manipulate her into helping them escape. In yet another even twistier twist, it turns out that Hilary Swank's character isn't the only one controlling people either. Not only did Mother probably engineer the end of the human race, but she's also been manipulating Woman this entire time too. NetflixMother herself 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. As if someone's had a purpose for you. Until now."With an ominous slam of the door, it's clear that Mother then goes on to murder Swank's character. But why would Mother risk losing Daughter by bringing Woman into the mix? As we mentioned before, everything that befalls Daughter is part of an ongoing test to see if she's worthy of leading humanity into a new dawn. Woman was allowed to live as long as she did in order to tempt Daughter into leaving, like the biblical serpent who encouraged Adam and Eve to misbehave and end up leaving the Garden of Eden. When that plan failed upon Daughter's return to the bunker, Woman outlived her usefulness and no longer needed to be kept alive. While Mother might seem evil on the surface, she still doesn't kill Daughter when she returns at the end, because she came back to look after her new brother. By demonstrating her selfless desire to keep the human race alive, Daughter proved that she was worthy and therefore passed Mother's ultimate test "That's what you’ve raised me to do, isn't it? Take care of my family? So let me."NetflixAt this point, Mother could easily remain in control of the bunker thanks to her superior strength and vast army, but instead she concedes control to Daughter, convinced that the embryos are now in safe hands. The robot declares, "I was raised to value human life above all else," and now that Daughter has proven herself to be a worthy guardian to humanity, Mother is no longer needed doesn't stop the murderous mecha from offering her help – "If you ever need to find me..." – but Daughter is quick to interrupt Mother by shooting her CPU before falling to the ground, crying. More a symbolic act of defiance than a legitimate attempt to 'defeat' Mother once and for all, this marks the end of the experiment. Mother's consciousness still exists in the other droids outside, but she's now giving Daughter the freedom to raise the embryos how she sees fit, without any further very last scene echoes the beginning of the movie, but this time round, it's Daughter who sings the song 'Baby of Mine' to her new charge, just like Mother once sang to her as a you predicted things would turn out this way or not, I Am Mother is still a worthy addition to Netflix's growing library of genre offerings. Let’s just hope that Daughter turns out to be this worthy as well or humanity might face another apocalypse sooner rather than later. I Am Mother is now available to watch on up-to-the-minute entertainment news and features? Just hit 'Like' on our Digital Spy Facebook page and 'Follow' on our digitalspy Instagram and Twitter teaching in England and South Korea, David turned to writing in Germany, where he covered everything from superhero movies to the Berlin Film Festival. In 2019, David moved to London to join Digital Spy, where he could indulge his love of comics, horror and LGBTQ+ storytelling as Deputy TV Editor, and later, as Acting TV Editor. David has spoken on numerous LGBTQ+ panels to discuss queer representation and in 2020, he created the Rainbow Crew interview series, which celebrates LGBTQ+ talent on both sides of the camera via video content and longform reads. Beyond that, David has interviewed all your faves, including Henry Cavill, Pedro Pascal, Olivia Colman, Patrick Stewart, Ncuti Gatwa, Jamie Dornan, Regina King, and more — not to mention countless Drag Race legends. As a freelance entertainment journalist, David has bylines across a range of publications including Empire Online, Radio Times, INTO, Highsnobiety, Den of Geek, The Digital Fix and Sight & Sound. LinkedIn
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IAm Mother ending explained 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 ).
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.
Motheris the main antagonist in the movie I Am Mother. She is a robot responsible for ending all life on earth due to humanity's mistakes, believing that the world should be reset by using robots called Dozers. Due to humanity's extinction from Dozers, Mother managed to meet a girl but due to her being imperfect, she was killed and later cloned from her DNA. She later killed two other clones
NetflixThis post contains spoilers for Netflix's I Am happens when artificial intelligence rises up and destroys mankind, only to repopulate the planet in their image? With its new movie I Am Mother, Netflix flips this common sci-fi trope, aiming to not only answer that question but hold a mirror up to our society, giving us a look at our own preconceived notions surrounding motherhood, technology, and the perseverance of the human concept of "The Singularity" - a reality in which artificial intelligence surpasses humanity in intellect and power - is nothing new. We've seen tons of takes on this idea, from classics like 2001 A Space Odyssey and Blade Runner to blockbusters like the Terminator franchise to high concept shows like HBO's Westworld and Netflix's Black Mirror. We all know what it may look like when the robots revolt, but one thing we don't often see is the its opening frame, a title card reads "Days Since Extinction Event 001," setting the stage for something quite bleak to unfold. And it does, but not in the formulaic way you'd expect. I Am Mother, which premiered at this year's Sundance Film Festival back in January, follows a lone robot in an underground bunker, giving the allusion that the world above ground is no longer fit for human life. We watch her - this robot is known as Mother and, yes, she comes with her own gender identity - as she sorts through a whole supply of human embryos before she chooses one to plug into the facility's system, soon birthing the first human girl into this brave new world. As Daughter grows, Mother is shown teaching her lessons on human nature and philosophy, positing noble values of honor and sacrifice into the young woman's mind. But as Daughter begins to express curiosity about the world outside of this glorified fallout shelter, posing some bigger picture-style questions about her own identity and where she fits into things, a strange woman sporting a gunshot wound appears at the bunker's door. Her introduction ends up throwing daggers of doubt at Daughter, causing the girl to further question everything she has ever learned about herself, about Mother, and about the Earth that exists outside these stories like these play out in a big-budget manner where a large cast and overpriced special effects can take away from the necessary human element. But that's not the case here. The majority of I Am Mother takes place in one setting and the cast sports just three actresses Rose Byrne as the voice of Mother, Clara Rugaard as Daughter, and Hilary Swank as the injured woman. The tiny cast, along with the sparse, mostly claustrophobic, nature of the film's setting, gives the movie a place to settle and breathe, embracing not only the big chaotic moments and there definitely are those but the quiet, thoughtful spaces in between. Given that Grant Sputore doesn't have a big roster of credits to his name, he displays some strong directorial chops here. It's a challenging feat to deliver an engaging story, with constant tension - the feeling of dread is consistent and steadily builds throughout the near two-hour running time - while maintaining a firm cohesiveness to the narrative, allowing the actors to build out their characters and handle their conflicts to a conclusion that is satisfying while the actors do their jobs well, the ending leaves major room for the audience to fill in the blanks. Yes, this is a futuristic tale of world-destruction, and subsequent colonization, by an enemy robot species, but the issues explored in I Am Mother go beyond this glaring reality. There's value to human life amid this apocalyptic hellscape, and the moral responsibilities that come with bringing a child into the world, along with the consequences that come from a parent's protective lies, paint an abstract, yet relatable, picture of the ongoing struggle mothers go through daily. Except, of course, most children in the real world aren't raised by murderous droids. Daughter eventually learns that Mother is not the loving parent she was raised to view her as. The bot may have been the one who brought the girl into the world, raised her, protected her, taught her valuable lessons, but it's revealed in the third act that Mother is just a technological shell, a cog in the greater machine, sharing a consciousness with countless other robot soldiers out there policing the planet. They may not be Star Trek The Next Generation's Borg, but their mission to dominate the Earth and raise a new generation of superior humans brings to mind hints of Hitler's "Ubermensch" and Blade Runner's "more human than human" motif. Needless to say, this idea of a policing body dictating how children are born and raised - it's eventually revealed that Mother incinerated a bunch of kids because they just didn't live up to certain quality control standards - feels a bit too relevant to the current issues of the day. NetflixRebelling against her own robotic parent, Daughter eventually follows the wounded woman and makes it out of the bunker alive. But the bleak wasteland that lays waiting outside these walls doesn't offer her any sense of reprieve. And when she learns that this stranger had been lying to her about the state of humanity's existence, that they're all alone in this post-apocalyptic maw, it doesn't take long before Daughter heads right back to the place she was Swank may be the biggest name attached to the project her performance here is fine, but the story is fully carried by Rugaard, who brings a nuanced, emotional vitality to her role. Byrne's vocal performance as Mother delivers a welcome feminine flair to the film's lead robot body, her subdued acting bringing a caring, yet ominous feel that permeates the whole thing, giving us major HAL 9000 the end, Daughter chooses the bunker over the world outside. Mother allows her to destroy her robot body, giving the young girl a moment of empowerment. But that beat is quickly replaced with the realization that she's the mother now - and it is her responsibility to look over the thousands of embryos, waiting in stasis, to be born. Does she follow the path she'd been groomed for since birth? That's all left up to interpretation. As the movie ends on the girl's face, she looks in on Earth's future human population. This ambiguous ending may leave many with a bad taste in their mouths, taking this final story twist as an anti-abortion message of sorts. But, when taking a step back, it feels as if I Am Mother is, like many science fiction films before it, warning us of the dangers that come with our growing dependence on technology, while assuring us of human nature's enduring drive to survive - and up here for our daily Thrillist email, get Streamail for more entertainment, and subscribe here for our YouTube channel to get your fix of the best in food/drink/ Pruner is a contributor to Thrillist.
Inthis 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
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 naive_bayes= GaussianNB #Fitting the data to the classifier. , y_train) #Predict on test data. y_predicted = naive_bayes.predict (X_test) The .fit method of GaussianNB class requires the feature data (X_train) and the target variables as input arguments (y_train). Frustrating but engrossing, and impossible to critique in-depth without spoilers because it's driven by regular plot twists, "I Am Mother" adds another memorable creation to an already packed gallery of intelligent science fiction robots that are as complex as most humans. This review discusses the entire plot in detail, so you'd best bail out now if you haven't seen it, with the assurance that it's worth having an opinion on. The title character is a humanoid robot with artificial intelligence who lives in a high-tech underground research facility, tending embryos and raising one that she activated and nurtured. This aluminum lady is voiced by Rose Byrne, embodied by Luke Hawker, and rendered by Weta Digital, in a collaborative performance as fully realized any you've seen. The robot's heavy-footed yet graceful motions evoke RoboCop when she's clomping around, and the T-1000 from "Terminator 2 Judgment Day" when she's sprinting. But as physically imposing as she is, Mother would be nothing without her child Clara Ruugard, whom she raised from an embryo and addresses as Daughter. Their fraught central relationship elevates "I Am Mother" beyond mere proficiency and makes it memorable, despite a lingering feeling that the filmmakers never quite figured out how to capitalize on their morally and philosophically rich premise, and settled instead for the superficial, cliff-hanging pleasures of "And then this happened..." The most frustrating thing about "I Am Mother" is the way it favors the unveiling of plot twists over nearly everything else, including characterization, theme, and the related pleasures of world-building. In retrospect, the entire production feels misshapen. It spends more time assuring us of the benevolent relationship between Mother and Daughter than the movie needed, considering that no robot with the body of a combat droid, the voice of Nurse Ratched from "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," and a single, unblinking, HAL-9000-style eye is going to turn out to be entirely loving and harmless. The movie also needlessly delays the arrival of the movie's second, rival "mother" figure Hilary Swank's character, mostly fails to develop the idea of her as a plausible rival for the daughter's affections, then effectively waves away what little we were given by implying that she was an early version of Daughter and part of some kind of sinister grand plan. No sooner are we out of the shelter than Daughter goes back home for some good old-fashioned matricide, and throughout the film's second half, you sometimes get the feeling that the moviemakers are using intimate, intense scenes of suspense and violence to run out the clock and make a movie that's built around just three characters feel "bigger" and more "cinematic." Alex Garland's "Ex Machina," which likewise had a small cast and was set mainly at a research facility, is a superior example of the same kind of movie, building to a peak of savagery that it absolutely earns, and tying every violent action to the psychology of its characters. Pixar fans will raise an appreciative eyebrow at the compressed opening montage, prankishly scored to a cover of "Baby Mine" from "Dumbo" and nodding to both the tearjerking opening montage of "Up" and the wordless first act of "Wall-E" a harmonic convergence of Disney references. The latter is also set some time after an ecological catastrophe that wiped out humankind, although we get incomplete information here as to whether robots actively caused the death of civilization or just ran rampant in the aftermath. The Swank character's account of robots torturing babies is more disturbing than many sequences where violence is actually shown, and it prepares us for the moment when Mother backs her against a wall and sticks a metal finger in her wound. That being said, the latter is one of many moments that don't make a lot of sense once you get to the film's powerful and cryptic ending. If Swank's visitor was being permitted to live the whole time because she's part of a larger cycle or plan involving the extinction and repopulation of the planet—and in fact has been left alone all these years for precisely that reason—then why was it necessary to torture her in order to learn the whereabouts of the other humans she mentioned to Daughter? These and other questions might not loom so large in the viewer's mind if "I Am Mother" had fully delivered on the promise of its setup. If it weren't so concerned with flipping the plot upside-down every 15 minutes in the manner of a Netflix series, hmmm the movie might've evolved into an unsettling meditation on artificial intelligence, and the legitimacy of simulated or manufactured feelings. It asks questions that science fiction has been posing for generations now, and that are regularly in the news in this era of increasingly sophisticated AI. If a robot is programmed to feel, and experiences a mother's positive feelings of investment and identification, as well as negative feelings like petty jealousy, rejection and rage, then who's to say that those feelings are "fake"—especially if they lead to actions as inevitably as a human's would? The movie regularly complicates our feelings about Mother's menacing and controlling behavior by confirming that she truly does feel maternal emotions for Daughter. That these feelings are probably closer on the movie moms spectrum to "Mommie Dearest" or "The Manchurian Candidate" than "Almost Famous" or "Terms of Endearment" doesn't diminish their legitimacy. This blocky droid really does think she knows what's best for her children, even if her logic makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. Directed by Grant Sputore and written by Michael Lloyd Green, "I Am Mother" is based loosely, it appears on the The Search for WondLa, the first in a trilogy of young adult science fiction novels by Tony DiTerlizzi. It seems as if it is positioning itself as the opening chapter in a series of movies, and it takes care to point out that all three of its major characters are alive at the end, and in no rush to die off. But is "I Am Mother" really commercial franchise material? There are many moments where it seems to embrace that tendency, but just as many where it seems determined to undermine it. The most obvious example of the latter is the ending. Although it's guaranteed to prompt cries of "I wasted two hours of my life for this?"—people tend to reject any ending where good doesn't obviously win—it's the best thing about the movie, the thing that makes it more than a smashing portfolio of production design or a collection of things that happen. It's an unusually realistic assessment of the endlessly replicating cycles of abuse that have been a common thread through human history it seems Daughter isn't the first daughter that Mother has messed up. It also acknowledges the relative impossibility of humans defeating a super-strong, super-intelligent robot army that they themselves created. The script's cleverest twist is making us think we're seeing yet another story where killing the leader of a malevolent force deactivates or neutralizes all of their minions as well a video game cliche, deployed in everything from "The Phantom Menace" to "Game of Thrones", only to assure us in the very next scene that Mother is a hydra with a seemingly infinite number of heads, just as she told Daughter. And what are we to make of that final closeup of Daughter's face? I took it to mean that she's a chip off the old aluminum block this is a Frankenstein story wherein the monster Mother became a creator herself breeding humans from embryos, in a eugenics operation. Now the creature's "daughter" contemplates activating the embryos herself, possibly becoming the matriarchal leader of her very own nation-state—one that might be capable of opposing the robots that once tormented her kind. That's all just a guess, of course—the way the movie sets up and pays off its last ten minutes seems an invitation to speculate and project, which is what real science fiction as opposed to science-fiction-flavored action or horror does best. I'll be thinking about the substance of this movie, and the dissonant and strangely melancholy notes that it leaves us with, long after the particulars of its plot have faded from my memory. Matt Zoller Seitz Matt Zoller Seitz is the Editor at Large of TV critic for New York Magazine and and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in criticism. Now playing Film Credits I Am Mother 2019 Rated NR 114 minutes Latest blog posts about 1 hour ago about 4 hours ago about 5 hours ago 1 day ago Comments
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36years old Megan Parry is an American meteorologist who has been working with ABC10 News Wiki⓿】parry Terjemahan Malay, parry Penjelasan・Definisi・Maksud, apa maksud parry ? parry Terjemahan dan Definisi, maksud parry It was released as a digital single on May 21, 2021, through Big Hit Music and Sony Music Entertainment, as the band's 'I Am Mother' ending explained some viewers of the Netflix film were left scratching their head after watching the film and its "twist" Jun. 11 2019, Updated 436 ETSource netflixIf you need the I Am Mother ending explained to you, then you're not alone. There are tons of viewers who watched Netflix's sci-fi flick and wondered just what the heck happened once the credits started quick warning going into this post, if you haven't seen the film, then just know that there are ginormous spoilers lurking ahead, so if you're not cool with that, you might not want to continue continues below advertisementFirst, what is I Am Mother about?The film starts off as a post-apocalyptic movie where audiences are introduced to Mother, a robot that was created solely to help repopulate Earth with human beings using embryos. Mother is also in charge of raising someone named Daughter played by Clara Rugaard all alone in a remote wrench gets thrown in the film's plot about girl-and-robot when a woman shows up, played by Hilary Swank, and starts telling Daughter that Mother has lied to her, especially about the way the world has who's responsible for the end of the world? Well, if you've seen The Terminator or The Matrix or Moon then you probably know where this is going...Article continues below advertisementSource netflixWhat does the ending of I Am Mother mean?It's quite clear by the end of the film that Mother is responsible for the destruction of humanity. An artificial intelligence system — similar to the one that Tesla founder Elon Musk is afraid of — has decided that the best thing for all of humankind would be to give us a "reset." Wiping us all out and raising us the right way, from continues below advertisementAs it turns out, Daughter is an experiment in this process, the third, actually. Remember those bones in the incinerator? Yeah, those were remains from the first two "Daughters" that Mother deemed weren't good enough to cut the mustard. Or at least, that's what we're lead to believe is in the netflixArticle continues below advertisementBut there is a major I Am Mother twist. As it turns out, the Woman Hilary was actually the first Daughter experiment. She tells the current Daughter that she was raised by a human family that adopted her and lived in tunnels following the apocalypse, but that they were killed by droids. This isn't the case though, and audiences discover this when a droid follows her home and corners her in her house a shipping searching through her bag, Woman finds a tracking device that was placed there by Mother. The Droid asks Woman a simple question that blows open her whole backstory why doesn't she ever remember her "birth parents?" Why was she able to survive this long while everyone else she knew around her had died or was killed? Had she even thought about what her "purpose" was?After melting Woman's mind, Mother then has the shipping container closed, with the implication that Woman is going to get continues below advertisementSource netflixWhy was Hilary Swank's character, Woman, left alive?It was all part of Mother's experiment. Woman was deemed to be a failure because she continually lied to save herself and made choices that harmed others in order to guarantee her own neck would be saved. She opts to live in the Wasteland herself instead of staying behind with continues below advertisementDaughter, on the other hand was selfless, nurturing, and kind. She even elects to stay behind in the bunker to help raise the human that Mother creates, Brother. Mother's recognized this as an indication that Daughter was indeed the "perfect" human being and "worthy" of raising Brother all by herself. Which is why she allows Daughter to raise Brother without the Mother to guide death was a consequence of Mother's plan coming together she was no longer needed because Daughter Clara was a netflixArticle continues below advertisementWait, what happened to the dog in I Am Mother?One of the more seemingly random parts of the film have to do with a cute dog that Daughter interacts with that belongs to Woman. After Daughter leaves Woman's presence, she leaves her a small gift, an Origami dog. Woman seemingly takes this the wrong way when she heals up in the facility Daughter resides documentary that Daughter watches about dogs as domesticated creatures serving humankind is very pertinent to Woman she is that same domesticated dog. She even says as much when bitterly talking to Daughter and asking if the young girl only views her as a "little pet friend."Article continues below advertisementSource netflix"Humanity created an AI designed to take care of us, and that's what it did. Only it decided to take care of us the way we take care of dogs. We all love dogs, but we still have the bad ones put down, and we still control their freedoms breeding programs, neutering, etc.... Mother was willing to put down the entire human race, in order to raise her own 'perfect' breed of just like dogs really have no say in their own futures, and instead depend almost completely on what we think is best for them, humanity is similarly trapped. The new generations of human are eventually going to walk out into a world completely controlled by Mother; a world where humanity is Mother's pet. A world ruled by what is, for all intents and purposes, an unbeatable, omnipresent, super-intelligent god if Mother really did plan both Daughter and the Woman's entire lives, without either of them noticing. And there's going to be nothing humanity can do but knuckle under and accept the authority of their new Overlord, which demands that everybody be a Good Boy and Girl lest they be put down. And there's really nothing I can see humans doing about that, just like how dogs, as a species, couldn't ever really get out from under our control on their own accord. We are too interested in dogs, and we know dogs to well, and we are way, way to smart for them to ever shake us off."Some trippy stuff. The ending is a bit dark, but at least we know that Daughter is a selfless individual, right?As for what happens to the dog, well, since everything is pretty much eliminated once it serves its purpose Woman, the Droid then we can safely assume the same happened to the puppy...sad. I I Am Mother on Netflix now.

Planetitu tercipta dari sisa-sisa inkursi yang terjadi di antara dua dunia yang di mana tidak seorang pun mengingat masa lalu mereka. Apa pun kasusnya, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness menempatkan landasan yang cukup untuk mempengaruhi MCU. (alv) halaman ke-3. 1.

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?
Theending of The Turning. Kate is led by footprints and the ghost of Miss Jessel to uncover the deceased tutor's body in a pond on the grounds. Along with a frightening vision of Jessel being
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