Robots, androids, cyborgs and other forms of Artificial Intelligence have long been a science fiction staple. With this weekend’s theatrical release of ‘Chappie’ in mind, let’s take a look at some of our favorite thinking machines from the worlds of movies and TV.
Shannon Nutt
“Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!” That’s right, my favorite robot is none other than the one from the classic (and campy) 1960s television series ‘Lost in Space‘. How cool was this robot? He was so cool that he didn’t even have a name. Everyone just called him “Robot”!
What was great about Robot is that we got to see his emotional development as the series progressed. Some forget that he was originally a soulless automaton who had been programmed by Dr. Smith to kill the Robinson family. During the first half of the first season, the Robinson family was very wary of the Robot, and it took the youngest family member, Will, to start spending time with it and help turn it into the trustworthy companion it would become as the series progressed.
The actor inside the robot was Bob May, but the person who really gave life to the character was voice actor Dick Tufeld, who also served as the series narrator. If you’re too young to remember this fun series, I’ve got good news. It’s scheduled to get a complete series Blu-ray release this fall to celebrate the show’s 50th anniversary.
Luke Hickman
There are many good answers to this question, but the very best is the T-1000 from ‘Terminator 2: Judgment Day‘. Able to change form and even mimic voices, this nearly indestructible machine is definitely the most badass robot to ever have existed. In the movie, it’s programmed with one directive: Kill John Conner. But it wouldn’t always have to be used for evil.
If I had a T-1000, I wouldn’t even use it to protect me. Its primary use would be to take my form and do the tedious things that I don’t want to do. Don’t want to go to work today? Have the programmable T-1000 go for you. Imagine having your car break down, but not having the cash to pay for the pricy labor required to repair it. Have the T-1000 fix it for you! I’d even use it for pranks around the office. Have it take the shape of your boss, then go around work firing people. The things you could do with your own personal T-1000 are limitless.
Chris Boylan (Big Picture Big Sound)
I’d say my favorite movie robot (or technically “Replicant”) would be Roy Batty (Rutger Hauer) from ‘Blade Runner‘. Highly intelligent, fiercely loyal and eminently deadly, Batty’s character combines the inquisitiveness of a child with the fierce violence of a trained killer. His soliloquy at the end of the film is one of the most powerful points in the movie. Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) has more than met his match in Batty, and yet, for all his training and violent nature, Batty shows that he’s capable of compassion too. More human than human indeed.
Adam Tyner (DVDTalk)
Sometimes bigger is better, and that’s why I have to give the nod to Unicron from ‘Transformers: The Movie‘. C’mon, he’s a planet-sized robot voiced by Orson Welles who eats entire worlds. Unicron eats entire worlds, I mean, not Orson Welles – although I’d pay to see that movie too.
Even though Unicron was a bad guy and nothing but his head stuck around after the movie (I guess “bigger is better” only lasts a couple of sentences), he’s still one of my all-time favorite robots.
Chris Chiarella (Sound & Vision)
So many to choose from, but I’ll go with Marvin (embodied by Warwick Davis and voiced by Alan Rickman), Zaphod Beeblebrox’s humble servant in ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy‘. Imbued with a “Genuine People Personality,” he is therefore perpetually depressed, lending further absurdity to every scene he’s in.
Brian Hoss
It’s quite clear that ‘Chappie’ has that special bit of optimism that seems to run through all the conventional sci-fi A.I.s, but my favorite A.I. is the antithesis of such sentiment. That would of course be Marvin from ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy‘. Between the recent movie and the old TV production, I favor the TV version of Marvin, mostly because he was so expertly crafted in the book series. His towering intellect is brought to heel under the auspice of being a servant, and it makes for endless moments wherein he laments how ridiculous his existence is. Ultimately, his trip through time is both disturbing and still wryly humorous: “The first ten million years were the worst. And the second first ten million, they were the worst too…”
Tom Landy
I think if I didn’t pick this guy who is standing in my home as I write this, there would definitely be “trouble”…
M. Enois Duarte
Competing for my #1 spot, ‘RoboCop‘ beats the likes of Roy Batty and WALL-E by a nose. In these three man-made artificial life-forms, we have a typical robot designed to serve humanity, a highly-intelligent and self-aware android that questions its existence, and a very mechanical, seemingly-oblivious cyborg. Of the three, the last machine caught my imagination since Paul Verhoeven’s 1987 action classic. Seeing police officer Alex Murphy become conscious while protecting the crime-ridden streets of Detroit shows that he’s more than just a Frankenstein creation of dead flesh or a simple assembly of cold, lifeless, shiny metallic parts. It’s a journey of finding one’s humanity, and proves that he’s not just another cog in the corporate machine.
Josh Zyber
Adam already mentioned one character in the animated ‘Transformers: The Movie’, but I feel it necessary to give a shout-out to Galvatron as well. R.I.P. Leonard Nimoy.
With that said, what I have in mind here isn’t a robot at all. Frankly, I think it’s a limitation of the imaginations of most sci-fi writers to assume that a thinking machine would be confined to a single humanoid body. If (or rather, when) mankind finally develops real Artificial General Intelligence, I see it being something like Samantha in the movie ‘Her‘ – a disembodied consciousness that exists across a network and is capable of rapid evolution. The fact that the movie depicts this without immediately envisioning an apocalyptic scenario is very clever and original, I think. It’s natural for humans to fear what we don’t know or understand, but the creation of a true General A.I. could be something wonderful, perhaps even the most important thing we’ve ever achieved as a species. If it happens to speak like a sultry-voiced Scarlett Johansson… well, that wouldn’t be too bad either.
An honorable mention of course must go out to HAL from Stanley Kubrick’s brilliant ‘2001: A Space Odyssey‘.
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From Johnny Five to Data on ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’, what are your favorite robots or A.I. from movies and TV? Tell us in the Comments.
Luke Hickman
Tom wins for the picture alone.
Csm101
800 series modele 101 . Evil Arnie as The Terminator.
Gipsy Danger
Cherno Alpha
The Iron Giant
Voltron Defender of the Universe (lion)
Peter Weller Robocop
The Vindicator. I loved how he looked under the metal
Vince Swallow
Paulie’s robot from Rocky 4.
Luke Hickman
Hahaha! I forgot about that thing!
agentalbert
I want to give a mention to Chalmers from the horrible 1983 movie “Space Hunter: Adventures In The Forbidden Zone”. Played by Andrea Marcovicci, she was the best thing about the movie and provided a plausible explanation for what Wolff (Peter Strauss) did all that time alone on a ship with just a “robot”.
Chaz Dumbaugh
Holy crap yeah, I thought I was like the ONLY one out there that remembered that movie, I watched that A TON as a kid….great Scifi Cheese and sorely underrated and of course kind of hard to find now….would love a Bluray release of that one 🙂
Rick Rosenberg
What about Robby from Forbidden Planet ! The blueprint for the Lost in Space robot.
Paparasta
Robby was more than the blueprint — same body, different head. And yes, he absolutely is my favorite. Close seconds are HAL9000 and the Maria robot in “Metropolis.”
photogdave
The poor father robot in Ice Pirates who sees his family tragically killed before his very optics.
“Mommy…? Baby…?”
Bill
Scariest? How about the Forbin Project? AI gone wild. Funniest? I agree with Marvin in Hitchhiker’s although Short Circuit comes close too. However the best robot movie for me remains the second Terminator. Robert Patrick was the most unstoppable and amazing force ever put on the screen.
And on a slightly off topic note. Am I the only one who would like to see the writers of the TV series, Scorpion, somehow let Robert Patrick (Cabe) reprise his Terminator type of character in an episode of his current series? Watching him play his avuncular role in Scorpion it is so hard to believe that he was Arnie’s shape changing, liquid metal nemesis in the second Terminator movie. How we all change (sigh)!
C.C. 95
B.O.B., V.I.N.CENT & MAXIMILLIAN from The Black Hole!!
And HUEY & DEWEY for Silent Running!!
But I would have to say favorite is DATA from ST:TNG and MARVIN from H2G2 (actually prefer the original BBC Radio Show iteration of him that preceded the books and the TV show (most people don’t know that the radio show was first)).
frankie
Box from Logan’s Run.
William Henley
Ones not mentioned yet
Ash from Alien
KITT from Knight Rider
MechaGodzilla
Cameron from the Sarah Connor Chronicles
Seven of Nine from Star Trek Voyager
The Borg Queen
The Borg Kids
Chi from Chobits
Spock’s Brain (man, that was a bad episode)
While not technically a robot, the Statue of Liberty from Ghostbusters 2
The mechs in Neon Genesis Evangelion
Twiki – Buck Rogers
The Cylons from BattleStar Galactica (the new series)
William Henley
Oh my gosh, how could I forget – the FemBots from Austin Powers!
Love the Area 51 bots from Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie
Chip from Not Quite Human
Vicky from Small Wonder!
William Henley
And the Darleks!
CSM101
Since no one else has mentioned him, Yul Brynner’s silver- eyed gunslinger from Westworld was also a childhood favorite. The use of robovision in that movie is so clever and I’ll bet Jim Cameron took a few pointers from that movie when shooting Terminator.
Charles M
Anyone else remember Astroboy? He was pretty cool.
Bill McClain
Julie Newmar was a living doll.
-Bill
Nathan Payne
One of the things I actually really liked about the first Resident Evil movie was the Red Queen.